Barry Brimer wrote:
With spaces separating groups:
egrep -e '^groupname:' /etc/group | awk -F : '{ print $4 }' | sed -e 's/,/ /g'
With commas separating groups:
egrep -e '^groupname:' /etc/group | awk -F : '{ print $4 }'
I'm sorry, I didn't specify, I'm using LDAP for user/group management.
Ideally a command like 'groups' would be nice, except it would be the
inverse, it would print the users in a group, not the groups a user
belongs to.
begin:vcard
fn:Tim Alberts
n:Alberts;Tim
org:Measurement Systems International;Engineering
adr:Suite 200;;14240 Interurban Avenue South;Seattle;WA;98168;USA
email;internet:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
title:Associate Engineer
tel;work:206-433-0199
tel;fax:206-244-8470
x-mozilla-html:FALSE
url:http://www.msiscales.com/
version:2.1
end:vcard
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