These functions operate on the netgroup database file
/etc/netgroup
which is described
in
netgroup(5).
The database defines a set of netgroups, each made up of one or more triples:
(host, user, domain)
that defines a combination of host, user and domain.
Any of the three fields may be specified as ``wildcards'' that match any
string.
The function
getnetgrent ();
sets the three pointer arguments to the strings of the next member of the
current netgroup.
If any of the string pointers are
(char *)0
that field is considered a wildcard.
The functions
setnetgrent ();
and
endnetgrent ();
set the current netgroup and terminate the current netgroup respectively.
If
setnetgrent ();
is called with a different netgroup than the previous call, an implicit
endnetgrent ();
is implied.
The
setnetgrent ();
function
also sets the offset to the first member of the netgroup.
The function
innetgr ();
searches for a match of all fields within the specified group.
If any of the
hostuser
or
domain
arguments are
(char *)0
those fields will match any string value in the netgroup member.
RETURN VALUES
The function
getnetgrent ();
returns 0 for ``no more netgroup members'' and 1 otherwise.
The function
innetgr ();
returns 1 for a successful match and 0 otherwise.
The functions
setnetgrent ();
and
endnetgrent ();
have no return value.
FILES
/etc/netgroup
netgroup database file
COMPATIBILITY
The netgroup members have three string fields to maintain compatibility
with other vendor implementations, however it is not obvious what use the
domain
string has within
BSD .