| 1 | .TH banned 8 "20 April 1999" "Local tools" |
| 2 | .SH NAME |
| 3 | banned \- tells a user that he's banned |
| 4 | .SH SYNOPSIS |
| 5 | .B banned |
| 6 | .SH USAGE |
| 7 | Set a user's shell to the |
| 8 | .B banned |
| 9 | program's path, and put a file |
| 10 | .B .banned |
| 11 | in his or her home directory (owned by |
| 12 | .B root |
| 13 | by preference). When the user logs in, he or she will be told to go |
| 14 | away, given the explanation from the |
| 15 | .B .banned |
| 16 | file, and logged out again. An entry is also made in the system logs, |
| 17 | using the |
| 18 | .B LOG_AUTH |
| 19 | facility. |
| 20 | .PP |
| 21 | Don't put |
| 22 | .B banned |
| 23 | in the |
| 24 | .B /etc/shells |
| 25 | file! |
| 26 | .SH FILES |
| 27 | .TP 5 |
| 28 | .B .banned |
| 29 | An explanation given to a user to explain why he or she should go away. |
| 30 | .SH BUGS |
| 31 | None planned. |
| 32 | .SEE ALSO |
| 33 | .BR chrootsh (8), |
| 34 | .BR ushell (1). |
| 35 | .SH AUTHOR |
| 36 | Mark Wooding (mdw@nsict.org) |