getnetgrent(3N)
NAME
getnetgrent, setnetgrent, endnetgrent, innetgr − get network group entry
SYNOPSIS
int getnetgrent(char ∗∗machinep, char ∗∗userp, char ∗∗domainp);
int setnetgrent(const char ∗netgroup);
int endnetgrent(void);
innetgr(const char ∗netgroup, const char ∗machine, char ∗user, const char ∗domain);
DESCRIPTION
getnetgrent() returns the next member of a network group. After the call, machinep will contain a pointer to a string containing the name of the machine part of the network group member, userp will contain a pointer to a string containing the user name and, domainp will contain a pointer to a string containing the domain name. If any of machinep, userp or domainp is returned as a NULL pointer, it signifies a wild card. getnetgrent() will use malloc(3C) to allocate space for the name. This space is released when an endnetgrent() call is made. getnetgrent() returns 1 if it succeeded in obtaining another member of the network group, 0 if it has reached the end of the group.
setnetgrent() establishes the network group from which getnetgrent() will obtain members. Calls to getnetgrent() start returning entries from the beginning of the list. If the previous setnetgrent() call was to a different network group, an endnetgrent() call is implied.
endnetgrent() frees the space allocated during the getnetgrent() calls.
innetgr() returns 1 or 0, depending on whether netgroup contains the machine, user, domain triple as a member. Any of the three strings machinep, userp, or domainp can be NULL, in which case it signifies a wild card.
SEE ALSO
WARNINGS
The Network Information Service (NIS) must be running when using getnetgrent(), since it only inspects the NIS netgroup map, never the local files.
SunOS 5.1 — Last change: 13 Mar 1992