From: Terry D. <td...@bi...> - 2001-11-16 17:58:15
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Yes, I am seeing stuff in: $action = "$ENV{ 'USERADMIN_ACTION' }"; $username = "$ENV{ 'USERADMIN_USER' }"; $uid = "$ENV{ 'USERADMIN_UID' }"; $name = "$ENV{ 'USERADMIN_REAL' }"; $home = "$ENV{ 'USERADMIN_HOME' }"; $shell = "$ENV{ 'USERADMIN_SHELL' }"; $pass = "$ENV{ 'USERADMIN_PASS' }"; Sorry about the assignments, I am being lazy, you get the point though. :) I am seeing values in all of those fields. I do see the members of the group though as you said. Here is what I was looking for. When I create a new user, under Redhat, you create a new group of that username. I want that stored in an ENV var somehow as well as any secondary groups that are selected on that screen as well. Thank you! -- Terry Davis Systems Administrator BirdDog Solutions, Inc. (402) 829-6059 Quoting Jamie Cameron <jca...@we...>: > Terry Davis <td...@bi...> wrote .. > > Hello! > > > > When I create a new user, there is a new group field that I want an > > environment variable for. I know there are these: > > $ENV{ 'USERADMIN_GROUP' } > > $ENV{ 'USERADMIN_SECONDARY' } > > $ENV{ 'USERADMIN_GID' } > > > > But none of those seem to contain anything when I create a new user. > > > > I am using version 0.88 on Redhat 7.1. > > Any ideas? > > Assuming you are writing a perl script that is set in the module config to > be run after changes are made, $ENV{'USERADMIN_GID'} should contain the gid > of the new users primary group. Are you seeing anything in any of the > environment > variables? > > - Jamie |