table of contents
NOLOGIN(8) | System Administration | NOLOGIN(8) |
NAME¶
nologin - politely refuse a login
SYNOPSIS¶
nologin [-V] [-h]
DESCRIPTION¶
nologin displays a message that an account is not available and exits non-zero. It is intended as a replacement shell field to deny login access to an account.
If the file /etc/nologin.txt exists, nologin displays its contents to the user instead of the default message.
The exit code returned by nologin is always 1.
OPTIONS¶
-c, --command command
--init-file
-i --interactive
--init-file file
-i, --interactive
-l, --login
--noprofile
--norc
--posix
--rcfile file
-r, --restricted
- These shell command-line options are ignored to avoid nologin error.
- -h, --help
- Display help text and exit.
- -V, --version
- Display version information and exit.
NOTES¶
nologin is a per-account way to disable login (usually used for system accounts like http or ftp). nologin(8) uses /etc/nologin.txt as an optional source for a non-default message, the login access is always refused independently of the file.
pam_nologin(8) PAM module usually prevents all non-root users from logging into the system. pam_nologin(8) functionality is controlled by /var/run/nologin or the /etc/nologin file.
AUTHORS¶
SEE ALSO¶
HISTORY¶
The nologin command appeared in 4.4BSD.
AVAILABILITY¶
The nologin command is part of the util-linux package and is available from Linux Kernel Archive.
November 2019 | util-linux |