Together, the /usr/sbin/useradd command and /etc/skel
directory (both are easy to set up and use) provide a way to assure new users are added to your LFS system with the same beginning settings for things such as the PATH
, keyboard processing and other environmental variables. Using these two facilities makes it easier to assure this initial state for each new user added to the system.
The /etc/skel
directory holds copies of various initialization and other files that may be copied to the new user's home directory when the /usr/sbin/useradd program adds the new user.
The useradd program uses a collection of default values kept in /etc/default/useradd
. This file is created in a base LFS installation by the Shadow package. If it has been removed or renamed, the useradd program uses some internal defaults. You can see the default values by running /usr/sbin/useradd -D.
To change these values, simply modify the /etc/default/useradd
file as the root
user. An alternative to directly modifying the file is to run useradd as the root
user while supplying the desired modifications on the command line. Information on how to do this can be found in the useradd man page.
To get started, create an /etc/skel
directory and make sure it is writable only by the system administrator, usually root
. Creating the directory as root
is the best way to go.
The mode of any files from this part of the book that you put in /etc/skel
should be writable only by the owner. Also, since there is no telling what kind of sensitive information a user may eventually place in their copy of these files, you should make them unreadable by "group" and "other".
You can also put other files in /etc/skel
and different permissions may be needed for them.
Decide which initialization files should be provided in every (or most) new user's home directory. The decisions you make will affect what you do in the next two sections, The Bash Shell Startup Files and The vimrc Files. Some or all of those files will be useful for root
, any already-existing users, and new users.
The files from those sections that you might want to place in /etc/skel
include .inputrc
, .bash_profile
, .bashrc
, .bash_logout
, .dircolors
, and .vimrc
. If you are unsure which of these should be placed there, just continue to the following sections, read each section and any references provided, and then make your decision.
You will run a slightly modified set of commands for files which are placed in /etc/skel
. Each section will remind you of this. In brief, the book's commands have been written for files not added to /etc/skel
and instead just sends the results to the user's home directory. If the file is going to be in /etc/skel
, change the book's command(s) to send output there instead and then just copy the file from /etc/skel
to the appropriate directories, like /etc
, ~
or the home directory of any other user already in the system.
When adding a new user with useradd, use the -m
parameter, which tells useradd to create the user's home directory and copy files from /etc/skel
(can be overridden) to the new user's home directory. For example (perform as the root
user):
useradd -m <newuser>
If you are sharing a /home
or /usr/src
with another Linux distro (for example, the host distro used for building LFS), you can create a user with the same UID (and, same primary group GID) to keep the file ownership consistent across the systems. First, on the other distro, get the UID of the user and the GID of the user's primary group:
getent passwd <username>
| cut -d ':' -f 3,4
The command should output the UID and GID, separated by a colon. Now on the BLFS system, create the primary group and the user:
groupadd -g<GID>
<username>
&& useradd -u<UID>
-g<username>
<username>