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passwd
Modify a user password.
First, the user is prompted for their current password. If the current password
is correctly typed, a new password is requested. The new password must be entered
twice to avoid typing errors.
SYNTAX passwd [-i infosystem] [-l location] [name] OPTIONS -i infosystem This option specifies where the password update should be applied. Under Mac OS X 10.3, supported infosystems are: netinfo (default) The netinfo database containing the user's pass- word. If no -l option is specified, the local netinfo database is assumed. file The local flat-files (included for legacy configurations). nis A remote NIS server containing the user's password. opendirectory A system conforming to opendirectory APIs and supporting updates (including LDAP, netinfo, etc). -l location This option causes the password to be updated in the given location of the choosen infosystem. When changing only the local password, pwd_mkdb(8) is used to update the password databases. for netinfo, location may be a domain name or server/tag for file, location may be a file name (/etc/master.passwd is the default) for nis, location may be a NIS domainname for opendirectory, location may be a directory node name The super-user privilages are not required change a user's current password if only the local password is modified.
The new password should be at least six characters long and not purely alphabetic. Its total length should be less than _PASSWORD_LEN (currently 128 characters) although some infosystems allow longer passwords.
Numbers, upper case letters and meta characters are encouraged. Once the password has been verified, passwd communicates the new password information to the authenticating host.
Files
/etc/master.passwd The user database
/etc/passwd A Version 7 format password file
/etc/passwd.XXXXXX Temporary copy of the password file
"Chico : you can't come in unless you give the password...
Well, what is the password?... I got it! Haddock! - Groucho
Marx
Related commands:
openssl passwd - compute the hash of a password
chgrp - Change group ownership
chmod - Change access permissions
chown - Change file owner and group
quota - Display disk usage and limits
who - Print who is currently logged in
chpass(1)
login - log into the computer
Equivalent BASH command:
passwd - Modify a user password.