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cifscreds add|clear|clearall|update [-u username] [-d] host|domain
The cifscreds
program is a tool for managing credentials (username
and password) for the purpose of establishing sessions in multiuser
mounts.
When a cifs filesystem is mounted with the "multiuser" option, and does
not use krb5 authentication, it needs to be able to get the credentials
for each user from somewhere. The cifscreds
program is the tool used
to provide these credentials to the kernel.
The first non-option argument to cifscreds is a command (see the COMMANDS section below). The second non-option argument is a hostname or address, or an NT domain name.
- add
- Add credentials to the kernel to be used for connecting to the given server, or servers in the given domain.
- clear
- Clear credentials for a particular host or domain from the kernel.
- clearall
- Clear all cifs credentials from the kernel.
- update
- Update stored credentials in the kernel with a new username and password.
-d, --domain | The provided host/domain argument is a NT domainname. Ordinarily the second argument provided to cifscreds is treated as a hostname or IP address. This option causes the cifscreds program to treat that argument as an NT domainname instead. If there are not host specific credentials for the mounted server, then the kernel will next look for a set of domain credentials equivalent to the domain= option provided at mount time. |
-u, --username | Ordinarily, the username is derived from the unix username of the user adding the credentials. This option allows the user to substitute a different username. |
The cifscreds utility requires a kernel built with support for the
login
key type. That key type was added in v3.3 in mainline Linux
kernels.
Since cifscreds
adds keys to the session keyring, it is highly
recommended that one use pam_keyinit
to ensure that a session keyring
is established at login time.
pam_keyinit(8)
The cifscreds program was originally developed by Igor Druzhinin <[email protected]>. This manpage and a redesign of the code was done by Jeff Layton <[email protected]>.