Name service switch configuration file
The Name Service Switch (NSS) configuration file, /etc/nsswitch.conf, is used by the GNU C Library to determine the sources from which to obtain name-service information in a range of categories, and in what order. Each category of information is identified by a database name.
The file is plain ASCII text, with columns separated by spaces or tab characters. The first column specifies the database name. The remaining columns describe the order of sources to query and a limited set of actions that can be performed by lookup result.
The following databases are understood by the GNU C Library:
aliases
Mail aliases, used by getaliasent(3) and related functions.
ethers
Ethernet numbers.
group
Groups of users, used by getgrent(3) and related functions.
hosts
Host names and numbers, used by gethostbyname(3) and related functions.
initgroups
Supplementary group access list, used by getgrouplist(3) function.
netgroup
Network-wide list of hosts and users, used for access rules. C libraries before glibc 2.1 supported netgroups only over NIS.
networks
Network names and numbers, used by getnetent(3) and related functions.
passwd
User passwords, used by getpwent(3) and related functions.
protocols
Network protocols, used by getprotoent(3) and related functions.
publickey
Public and secret keys for Secure_RPC used by NFS and NIS+.
rpc
Remote procedure call names and numbers, used by getrpcbyname(3) and related functions.
services
Network services, used by getservent(3) and related functions.
shadow
Shadow user passwords, used by getspnam(3) and related functions.
Here is an example /etc/nsswitch.conf file:
passwd:
compat
group:
compat
shadow:
compat
hosts:
dns [!UNAVAIL=return] files
networks:
nis [NOTFOUND=return] files
ethers:
nis [NOTFOUND=return] files
protocols:
nis [NOTFOUND=return] files
rpc:
nis [NOTFOUND=return] files
services:
nis [NOTFOUND=return] files
The first column is the database name. The remaining columns specify:
One or more service specifications, for example, "files", "db", or "nis". The order of the services on the line determines the order in which those services will be queried, in turn, until a result is found.
Optional actions to perform if a particular result is obtained from the preceding service, for example, "[NOTFOUND=return]".
The service specifications supported on your system depend on the presence of shared libraries, and are therefore extensible. Libraries called /lib/libnss_SERVICE.so.X will provide the named SERVICE. On a standard installation, you can use "files", "db", "nis", and "nisplus". For the hosts database, you can additionally specify "dns". For the passwd, group, and shadow databases, you can additionally specify "compat" (see Compatibility mode below). The version number X may be 1 for glibc 2.0, or 2 for glibc 2.1 and later. On systems with additional libraries installed, you may have access to further services such as "hesiod", "ldap", "winbind" and "wins".
An action may also be specified following a service specification. The action modifies the behavior following a result obtained from the preceding data source. Action items take the general form:
[STATUS=ACTION]
[!STATUS=ACTION]
where
STATUS => success | notfound | unavail | tryagain
ACTION => return | continue
The ! negates the test, matching all possible results except the one specified. The case of the keywords is not significant.
The STATUS value is matched against the result of the lookup function called by the preceding service specification, and can be one of:
success
No error occurred and the requested entry is returned. The default action for this condition is "return".
notfound
The lookup succeeded, but the requested entry was not found. The default action for this condition is "continue".
unavail
The service is permanently unavailable. This can mean either that the required file cannot be read, or, for network services, that the server is not available or does not allow queries. The default action for this condition is "continue".
tryagain
The service is temporarily unavailable. This could mean a file is locked or a server currently cannot accept more connections. The default action for this condition is "continue".
The ACTION value can be one of:
return
Return a result now. Do not call any further lookup functions. However, for compatibility reasons, if this is the selected action for the group database and the notfound status, and the configuration file does not contain the initgroups line, the next lookup function is always called, without affecting the search result.
continue
Call the next lookup function.
The NSS "compat" service is similar to "files" except that it additionally permits special entries in /etc/passwd for granting users or members of netgroups access to the system. The following entries are valid in this mode:
+user
Include the specified user from the NIS passwd map.
+user::::::
Include the specified user from the NIS passwd map, but override with non-empty passwd fields.
+@netgroup
Include all users in the given netgroup.
-user
Exclude the specified user from the NIS passwd map.
-@netgroup
Exclude all users in the given netgroup.
+
Include every user, except previously excluded ones, from the NIS passwd map.
By default the source is "nis", but this may be overridden by specifying "nisplus" as the source for the pseudo-databases passwd_compat, group_compat, and shadow_compat.
A service named SERVICE is implemented by a shared object library named libnss_SERVICE.so.X that resides in /lib.
/etc/nsswitch.conf
NSS configuration file.
/lib/libnss_compat.so.X
implements "compat" source.
/lib/libnss_db.so.X
implements "db" source.
/lib/libnss_dns.so.X
implements "dns" source.
/lib/libnss_files.so.X
implements "files" source.
/lib/libnss_hesiod.so.X
implements "hesiod" source.
/lib/libnss_nis.so.X
implements "nis" source.
/lib/libnss_nisplus.so.X
implements "nisplus" source.
Within each process that uses nsswitch.conf, the entire file is read only once. If the file is later changed, the process will continue using the old configuration.
Traditionally, there was only a single source for service information, often in the form of a single configuration file (e.g., /etc/passwd). However, as other name services, such as the Network Information Service (NIS) and the Domain Name Service (DNS), became popular, a method was needed that would be more flexible than fixed search orders coded into the C library. The Name Service Switch mechanism, which was based on the mechanism used by Sun Microsystems in the Solaris 2 C library, introduced a cleaner solution to the problem.
This page is part of release 3.74 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.