











                             44..44BBSSDD


                     SSyysstteemm MMaannaaggeerr''ss MMaannuuaall



                              ((SSMMMM))




















































Now  in  its twentieth year, the USENIX Association, the UNIX and
Advanced Computing Systems professional and  technical  organiza-
tion,  is  a not-for-profit membership association of individuals
and institutions with an interest in UNIX and UNIX-like  systems,
and,  by  extension, C++, X windows, and other advanced tools and
technologies.

USENIX and its members are dedicated to:

+o    fostering innovation and communicating research and  techno-
     logical developments,

+o    sharing ideas and experience relevant to UNIX, UNIX-related,
     and advanced computing systems, and

+o    providing a neutral  forum  for  the  exercise  of  critical
     thought and airing of technical issues.

USENIX  publishes  a  journal  (CCoommppuuttiinngg  SSyysstteemmss), a newsletter
(_;_l_o_g_i_n_:), Proceedings from its  frequent  Conferences  and  Sym-
posia, and a Book Series.

SAGE, The Systems Administrators Guild, a Special Technical Group
with the USENIX Association, is dedicated to the  advancement  of
system administration as a profession.

SAGE brings together systems managers and administrators to:

+o    propagate knowledge of good professional practice,

+o    recruit talented individuals to the profession,

+o    recognize individuals who attain professional excellence,

+o    foster  technical development and share solutions to techni-
     cal problems, and

+o    communicate in an organized voice  with  users,  management,
     and vendors on system administration topics.






























                             44..44BBSSDD


                     SSyysstteemm MMaannaaggeerr''ss MMaannuuaall



                              ((SSMMMM))








                 BBeerrkkeelleeyy SSooffttwwaarree DDiissttrriibbuuttiioonn


                           AApprriill,, 11999944








                 CCoommppuutteerr SSyysstteemmss RReesseeaarrcchh GGrroouupp

              UUnniivveerrssiittyy ooff CCaalliiffoorrnniiaa aatt BBeerrkkeelleeyy

















                    AA UUSSEENNIIXX AAssssoocciiaattiioonn BBooookk
                   OO''RReeiillllyy && AAssssoocciiaatteess,, IInncc..
                   110033 MMoorrrriiss SSttrreeeett,, SSuuiittee AA












                      SSeebbaassttooppooll,, CCAA 9944557722

































































First Printing, 1994
Second Printing, 1995


Copyright  1979,  1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993,
1994 The Regents of the University  of  California.   All  rights
reserved.


Other  than  the specific manual pages and documents listed below
as copyrighted by AT&T, redistribution and use of this manual  in
source  and  binary forms, with or without modification, are per-
mitted provided that the following conditions are met:

1)   Redistributions of this manual  must  retain  the  copyright
     notices  on  this page, this list of conditions and the fol-
     lowing disclaimer.

2)   Software or documentation that  incorporates  part  of  this
     manual  must  reproduce  the copyright notices on this page,
     this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in  the
     documentation  and/or other materials provided with the dis-
     tribution.

3)   All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this
     software  must display the following acknowledgement: ``This
     product includes software developed  by  the  University  of
     California, Berkeley and its contributors.''

4)   Neither the name of the University nor the names of its con-
     tributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived
     from  this  software  without specific prior written permis-
     sion.

TTHHIISS SSOOFFTTWWAARREE IISS PPRROOVVIIDDEEDD BBYY TTHHEE RREEGGEENNTTSS  AANNDD  CCOONNTTRRIIBBUUTTOORRSS  ````AASS
IISS''''  AANNDD  AANNYY  EEXXPPRREESSSS OORR IIMMPPLLIIEEDD WWAARRRRAANNTTIIEESS,, IINNCCLLUUDDIINNGG,, BBUUTT NNOOTT
LLIIMMIITTEEDD TTOO,, TTHHEE IIMMPPLLIIEEDD WWAARRRRAANNTTIIEESS OOFF MMEERRCCHHAANNTTAABBIILLIITTYY AANNDD FFIITTNNEESSSS
FFOORR  AA  PPAARRTTIICCUULLAARR PPUURRPPOOSSEE AARREE DDIISSCCLLAAIIMMEEDD..  IINN NNOO EEVVEENNTT SSHHAALLLL TTHHEE
RREEGGEENNTTSS OORR CCOONNTTRRIIBBUUTTOORRSS BBEE LLIIAABBLLEE FFOORR AANNYY DDIIRREECCTT,, IINNDDIIRREECCTT,, IINNCCII--
DDEENNTTAALL,,  SSPPEECCIIAALL,, EEXXEEMMPPLLAARRYY,, OORR CCOONNSSEEQQUUEENNTTIIAALL DDAAMMAAGGEESS ((IINNCCLLUUDDIINNGG,,
BBUUTT NNOOTT LLIIMMIITTEEDD TTOO,, PPRROOCCUURREEMMEENNTT OOFF SSUUBBSSTTIITTUUTTEE GGOOOODDSS OORR  SSEERRVVIICCEESS;;
LLOOSSSS  OOFF UUSSEE,, DDAATTAA,, OORR PPRROOFFIITTSS;; OORR BBUUSSIINNEESSSS IINNTTEERRRRUUPPTTIIOONN)) HHOOWWEEVVEERR
CCAAUUSSEEDD AANNDD OONN AANNYY  TTHHEEOORRYY  OOFF  LLIIAABBIILLIITTYY,,  WWHHEETTHHEERR  IINN  CCOONNTTRRAACCTT,,
SSTTRRIICCTT  LLIIAABBIILLIITTYY,,  OORR  TTOORRTT  ((IINNCCLLUUDDIINNGG NNEEGGLLIIGGEENNCCEE OORR OOTTHHEERRWWIISSEE))
AARRIISSIINNGG IINN AANNYY WWAAYY OOUUTT OOFF TTHHEE  UUSSEE  OOFF  TTHHIISS  SSOOFFTTWWAARREE,,  EEVVEENN  IIFF
AADDVVIISSEEDD OOFF TTHHEE PPOOSSSSIIBBIILLIITTYY OOFF SSUUCCHH DDAAMMAAGGEE..


The  Institute  of  Electrical  and Electronics Engineers and the
American National Standards Committee X3, on Information Process-
ing Systems have given us permission to reprint portions of their
documentation.














In the following statement, the phrase ``this  text''  refers  to
portions of the system documentation.

``Portions  of  this  text  are reprinted and reproduced in elec-
tronic form in 4.4BSD from IEEE Std  1003.1-1988,  IEEE  Standard
Portable  Operating  System  Interface  for Computer Environments
(POSIX), copyright 1988 by the Institute of Electrical and  Elec-
tronics  Engineers, Inc.  In the event of any discrepancy between
these versions and the original IEEE Standard, the original  IEEE
Standard is the referee document.''

In  the  following statement, the phrase ``This material'' refers
to portions of the system documentation.

``This material  is  reproduced  with  permission  from  American
National  Standards  Committee X3, on Information Processing Sys-
tems.  Computer and Business Equipment Manufacturers  Association
(CBEMA), 311 First St., NW, Suite 500, Washington, DC 20001-2178.
The developmental work of Programming Language C was completed by
the X3J11 Technical Committee.''


Manual  pages  cron.8, icheck.8, ncheck.8, and sa.8 and documents
SMM:15, 16, and 17 are copyright 1979,  AT&T  Bell  Laboratories,
Incorporated.   Document  SMM:14  is a modification of an earlier
document that is copyrighted  1979  by  AT&T  Bell  Laboratories,
Incorporated.   Holders  of  UNIXTM/32V,  System III, or System V
software licenses are permitted to copy these documents,  or  any
portion  of  them, as necessary for licensed use of the software,
provided this copyright notice and statement  of  permission  are
included.


The  views  and conclusions contained in this manual are those of
the authors and should not be interpreted as  representing  offi-
cial policies, either expressed or implied, of the Regents of the
University of California.


The 4.4BSD Daemon used on the cover is copyright 1994 by Marshall
Kirk McKusick and is reproduced with permission.
This  book was printed and bound in the United States of America.
Distributed by O'Reilly & Associates, Inc.


[recycle logo]  This book is printed on acid-free paper with  50%
                recycled  content,  10-13%  post-consumer  waste.
                O'Reilly & Associates is committed to using paper
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ISBN: 1-56592-080-5


















                            CCoonntteennttss



Introduction                                                  vii


List of Manual Pages                                           ix


Permuted Index                                              xxxix


Reference Manual Section 8                              tabbed M8

     Section 8 of  the  UNIX  Programmer's  Manual  contains
     information  related  to  system operation, administra-
     tion, and maintenance.


Installing and Operating 4.4BSD                          tabbed 1

     The definitive reference document for  those  occasions
     when you find you need to start over again.


Building 4.4BSD Kernels with _C_o_n_f_i_g                      tabbed 2

     In-depth  discussions  of  the use and operation of the
     _c_o_n_f_i_g program, and how to build  your  very  own  Unix
     kernel.


Fsck - The UNIX File System Check Program                tabbed 3

     A  reference document for using the _f_s_c_k program during
     times of file system distress.


Disc Quotas in a UNIX Environment                        tabbed 4

     A light introduction to the techniques for limiting the
     use of disc resources.


A Fast File System for UNIX                              tabbed 5

     A  description  of the 4.4BSD file system organization,
     design and implementation.









- viii -                                                 Contents


The 4.4BSD NFS Implementation                            tabbed 6

     An overview of the design, implementation, and  use  of
     NFS on 4.4BSD.


Line Printer Spooler Manual                              tabbed 7

     This  document describes the structure and installation
     procedure for the line printer spooling system.


Sendmail Installation and Operation Guide                tabbed 8

     The last word in installing and operating the  _s_e_n_d_m_a_i_l
     program.


Sendmail - An Internetwork Mail Router                   tabbed 9

     An  overview  document on the design and implementation
     of _s_e_n_d_m_a_i_l.


Name Server Operations Guide for BIND                   tabbed 10

     Setting up and operating the name to Internet  address-
     ing  software.   If  you have a network this will be of
     interest.


Timed Installation and Operation Guide                  tabbed 11

     Describes how to maintain time synchronization  between
     machines in a local network.


The Berkeley UNIX Time Synchronization Protocol         tabbed 12

     The protocols and algorithms used by timed, the network
     time synchronization daemon.


AMD - The 4.4BSD Automounter                            tabbed 13

     Automatically mounting file systems on demand.


Installation and Operation of UUCP                      tabbed 14

     Describes the implementation of uucp; for the installer
     and administrator.











Contents                                                   - ix -


A Dial-Up Network of UNIX Systems                       tabbed 15

     Describes  UUCP,  a  program  for  communicating  files
     between UNIX systems.


On the Security of UNIX                                 tabbed 16

     Hints on how to break UNIX, and how to avoid your  sys-
     tem being broken.


Password Security - A Case History                      tabbed 17

     How  the bad guys used to be able to break the password
     algorithm, and why they cannot now  (at  least  not  so
     easily).


Networking Implementation Notes, 4.4BSD Edition         tabbed 18

     A  concise  description  of  the system interfaces used
     within the networking subsystem.


The PERL Programming Language                           tabbed 19

     The Practical Extraction and Report Language  is  ideal
     for writing those pesky adminitration scripts.


List of Documents                               inside back cover































- x -                                                    Contents




































































                             IInnttrroodduuccttiioonn



The  documentation  for  4.4BSD is in a format similar to the one
used for the 4.2BSD and 4.3BSD manuals.  It is divided into three
sets;  each  set  consists of one or more volumes.  The abbrevia-
tions for the volume names are listed  in  square  brackets;  the
abbreviations  for the manual sections are listed in parenthesis.

     I. User's Documents
          User's Reference Manual [URM]
               Commands (1)
               Games (6)
               Macro packages and language conventions (7)
          User's Supplementary Documents [USD]
               Getting Started
               Basic Utilities
               Communicating with the World
               Text Editing
               Document Preparation
               Amusements

     II. Programmer's Documents
          Programmer's Reference Manual [PRM]
               System calls (2)
               Subroutines (3)
               Special files (4)
               File formats and conventions (5)
          Programmer's Supplementary Documents [PSD]
               Documents of Historic Interest
               Languages in common use
               Programming Tools
               Programming Libraries
               General Reference

     III. System Manager's Manual [SMM]
          Maintenance commands (8)
          System Installation and Administration


References to individual documents are  given  as  ``volume:docu-
ment'',  thus  USD:1 refers to the first document in the ``User's
Supplementary Documents''.  References to manual pages are  given
as  ``_n_a_m_e(section)'' thus _s_h(1) refers to the shell manual entry
in section 1.

The manual pages give descriptions of the features of the  4.4BSD
system, as developed at the University of California at Berkeley.
They do not attempt to provide perspective or  tutorial  informa-
tion  about  the  4.4BSD operating system, its facilities, or its
implementation.  Various documents on those topics are  contained
in  the ``UNIX User's Supplementary Documents'' (USD), the ``UNIX
Programmer's Supplementary Documents'' (PSD), and  ``UNIX  System









- xii -                                              Introduction


Manager's  Manual''  (SMM).   In  particular, for an overview see
``The UNIX Time-Sharing System'' (PSD:1) by Ritchie and Thompson;
for  a  tutorial see ``UNIX for Beginners'' (USD:1) by Kernighan,
and for an guide to the new features of this latest version,  see
``Berkeley  Software Architecture Manual (4.4 Edition)'' (PSD:5).

Within the area it surveys, this volume attempts  to  be  timely,
complete  and concise.  Where the latter two objectives conflict,
the obvious is often left unsaid in  favor  of  brevity.   It  is
intended  that  each  program  be  described  as it is, not as it
should be.  Inevitably, this means  that  various  sections  will
soon be out of date.

Commands  are  programs  intended  to  be invoked directly by the
user, in contrast to subroutines, that are intended to be  called
by  the user's programs.  User commands are described in URM sec-
tion 1.  Commands generally reside in directory _/_b_i_n (for  _b_i_nary
programs).   Some programs also reside in _/_u_s_r_/_b_i_n_, to save space
in _/_b_i_n_.  These directories are  searched  automatically  by  the
command  interpreters.   Additional  directories  that  may be of
interest include _/_u_s_r_/_c_o_n_t_r_i_b_/_b_i_n_, which has contributed software
_/_u_s_r_/_o_l_d_/_b_i_n_,  which  has old but sometimes still useful software
and _/_u_s_r_/_l_o_c_a_l_/_b_i_n_, which contains software local to your site.

Games have been relegated to URM section  6  and  _/_u_s_r_/_g_a_m_e_s_,  to
keep  them  from  contaminating the more staid information of URM
section 1.

Miscellaneous collection of information necessary for writing  in
various  specialized  languages  such  as  character codes, macro
packages for typesetting, etc is contained in URM section 7.

System calls are entries into the BSD kernel.   The  system  call
interface is identical to a C language procedure call; the equiv-
alent C procedures are described in PRM section 2.

An assortment of subroutines is available; they are described  in
PRM  section 3.  The primary libraries in which they are kept are
described in _i_n_t_r_o(3).  The functions are described in  terms  of
C.

PRM  section  4  discusses  the  characteristics  of  each system
``file'' that refers to an I/O device.  The names in this section
refer  to the HP300 device names for the hardware, instead of the
names of the special files themselves.

The file formats and conventions (PRM section  5)  documents  the
structure  of particular kinds of files; for example, the form of
the output of the loader and assembler is  given.   Excluded  are
files  used  by  only  one  command,  for example the assembler's
intermediate files.

Commands and procedures intended for use primarily by the  system
administrator   are  described  in  SMM  section  8.   The  files









Introduction                                             - xiii -


described here are almost all kept in the  directory  _/_e_t_c_.   The
system administration binaries reside in _/_s_b_i_n_, and _/_u_s_r_/_s_b_i_n_.

Each  section  consists  of  independent  entries of a page or so
each.  The name of the entry is  in  the  upper  corners  of  its
pages,  together  with  the  section number.  Entries within each
section are alphabetized.  The page numbers of each  entry  start
at  1;  it  is  infeasible to number consecutively the pages of a
document like this that is republished in many variant forms.

All entries are based on a common  format;  not  all  subsections
always appear.

     The  _n_a_m_e  subsection  lists the exact names of the commands
     and subroutines covered under the entry and  gives  a  short
     description of their purpose.

     The  _s_y_n_o_p_s_i_s  summarizes  the  use  of  the  program  being
     described.  A few conventions are used, particularly in  the
     Commands subsection:

          BBoollddffaaccee  words  are considered literals, and are typed
          just as they appear.

          Square brackets [ ] around an argument  show  that  the
          argument  is  optional.   When  an argument is given as
          ``name'', it always refers to a file name.

          Ellipses ``...'' are used to  show  that  the  previous
          argument-prototype may be repeated.

          A  final convention is used by the commands themselves.
          An argument beginning with a minus sign  ``-''  usually
          means that it is an option-specifying argument, even if
          it appears in  a  position  where  a  file  name  could
          appear.   Therefore,  it  is unwise to have files whose
          names begin with ``-''.

     The _d_e_s_c_r_i_p_t_i_o_n subsection discusses in detail  the  subject
     at hand.

     The _f_i_l_e_s subsection gives the names of files that are built
     into the program.

     A _s_e_e _a_l_s_o subsection gives pointers to related information.

     A  _d_i_a_g_n_o_s_t_i_c_s  subsection  discusses the diagnostic indica-
     tions that may be produced.  Messages that are  intended  to
     be self-explanatory are not listed.

     The _b_u_g_s subsection gives known bugs and sometimes deficien-
     cies.  Occasionally the suggested fix is also described.











- xiv -                                              Introduction


At the beginning of URM, PRM, and SSM is a List of Manual  Pages,
organized  by section and alphabetically within each section, and
a Permuted Index derived  from  that  List.   Within  each  index
entry, the title of the writeup to which it refers is followed by
the appropriate section number  in  parentheses.   This  fact  is
important  because  there  is considerable name duplication among
the sections, arising principally from commands that  exist  only
to  exercise  a particular system call.  Finally, there is a list
of documents on the inside back cover of each volume.

























































                      LLiisstt ooff MMaannuuaall PPaaggeess

11.. CCoommmmaannddss aanndd AApppplliiccaattiioonn PPrrooggrraammss

22.. SSyysstteemm CCaallllss

33.. CC LLiibbrraarryy SSuubbrroouuttiinneess

44.. SSppeecciiaall FFiilleess

55.. FFiillee FFoorrmmaattss

66.. GGaammeess

77.. MMiisscceellllaanneeoouuss

88.. SSyysstteemm MMaaiinntteennaannccee








































Section 8                                      System Maintenance





- xvi -                                              Manual Pages



























































System Maintenance                                      Section 8









                         PPeerrmmuutteedd IInnddeexx























































4.4BSD                                                 April 1994


