242 lines
11 KiB
Groff
242 lines
11 KiB
Groff
.\" $Xorg: xauth.man,v 1.4 2001/02/09 02:05:38 xorgcvs Exp $
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.\" Copyright 1993, 1998 The Open Group
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.\"
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.\" Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this software and its
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.\" documentation for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided that
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.\" the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that
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.\" copyright notice and this permission notice appear in supporting
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.\" documentation.
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.\"
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.\" The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
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.\" in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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.\"
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.\" THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
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.\" OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
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.\" MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
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.\" IN NO EVENT SHALL THE OPEN GROUP BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR
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.\" OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE,
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.\" ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR
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.\" OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
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.\"
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.\" Except as contained in this notice, the name of The Open Group shall
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.\" not be used in advertising or otherwise to promote the sale, use or
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.\" other dealings in this Software without prior written authorization
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.\" from The Open Group.
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.\"
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.\" $XFree86: xc/programs/xauth/xauth.man,v 1.8tsi Exp $
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.\"
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.TH XAUTH 1 __xorgversion__
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.SH NAME
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xauth \- X authority file utility
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.B xauth
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[ \fB\-f\fP \fIauthfile\fP ] [ \fB\-vqibn\fP ] [ \fIcommand arg ...\fP ]
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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.PP
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The \fIxauth\fP program is used to edit and display the authorization
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information used in connecting to the X server. This program is usually
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used to extract authorization records from one machine and merge them in on
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another (as is the case when using remote logins or granting access to
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other users). Commands (described below) may be entered interactively,
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on the \fIxauth\fP command line, or in scripts. Note that this program
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does \fBnot\fP contact the X server except when the generate command is used.
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Normally \fIxauth\fP is not used to create the authority file entry in
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the first place; \fIxdm\fP does that.
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.SH OPTIONS
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The following options may be used with \fIxauth\fP. They may be given
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individually (e.g., \fI\-q \-i\|\fP) or may combined (e.g., \fI\-qi\|\fP).
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.TP 8
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.B "\-f \fIauthfile\fP"
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This option specifies the name of the authority file to use. By default,
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\fIxauth\fP will use the file specified by the XAUTHORITY environment variable
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or \fI\.Xauthority\fP in the user's home directory.
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.TP 8
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.B \-q
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This option indicates that \fIxauth\fP should operate quietly and not print
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unsolicited status messages. This is the default if an \fIxauth\fP command
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is given on the command line or if the standard output is not directed to a
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terminal.
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.TP 8
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.B \-v
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This option indicates that \fIxauth\fP should operate verbosely and print
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status messages indicating the results of various operations (e.g., how many
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records have been read in or written out). This is the default if \fIxauth\fP
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is reading commands from its standard input and its standard output is
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directed to a terminal.
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.TP 8
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.B \-i
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This option indicates that \fIxauth\fP should ignore any authority file
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locks. Normally, \fIxauth\fP will refuse to read or edit any authority files
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that have been locked by other programs (usually \fIxdm\fP or another
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\fIxauth\fP).
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.TP 8
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.B \-b
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This option indicates that \fIxauth\fP should attempt to break any authority
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file locks before proceeding. Use this option only to clean up stale locks.
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.TP 8
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.B \-n
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This option indicates that \fIxauth\fP should not attempt to resolve any
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hostnames, but should simply always print the host address as stored in
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the authority file.
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.SH COMMANDS
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The following commands may be used to manipulate authority files:
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.TP 8
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.B "add \fIdisplayname protocolname hexkey"
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An authorization entry for the indicated display using the given protocol
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and key data is added to the authorization file. The data is specified as
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an even-lengthed string of hexadecimal digits, each pair representing
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one octet. The first digit of each pair gives the most significant 4 bits
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of the octet, and the second digit of the pair gives the least significant 4
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bits. For example, a 32 character hexkey would represent a 128-bit value.
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A protocol name consisting of just a
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single period is treated as an abbreviation for \fIMIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1\fP.
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.TP 8
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.B "generate \fIdisplayname protocolname\fP \fR[\fPtrusted|untrusted\fR]\fP"
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.B \fR[\fPtimeout \fIseconds\fP\fR]\fP \fR[\fPgroup \fIgroup-id\fP\fR]\fP \fR[\fBdata \fIhexdata\fR]
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This command is similar to add. The main difference is that instead
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of requiring the user to supply the key data, it connects to the
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server specified in \fIdisplayname\fP and uses the SECURITY extension
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in order to get the key data to store in the authorization file. If
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the server cannot be contacted or if it does not support the SECURITY
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extension, the command fails. Otherwise, an authorization entry for
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the indicated display using the given protocol is added to the
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authorization file. A protocol name consisting of just a single
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period is treated as an abbreviation for \fIMIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1\fP.
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If the \fBtrusted\fP option is used, clients that connect using this
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authorization will have full run of the display, as usual. If
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\fBuntrusted\fP is used, clients that connect using this authorization
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will be considered untrusted and prevented from stealing or tampering
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with data belonging to trusted clients. See the SECURITY extension
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specification for full details on the restrictions imposed on
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untrusted clients. The default is \fBuntrusted\fP.
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The \fBtimeout\fP option specifies how long in seconds this
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authorization will be valid. If the authorization remains unused (no
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clients are connected with it) for longer than this time period, the
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server purges the authorization, and future attempts to connect using
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it will fail. Note that the purging done by the server does \fBnot\fP
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delete the authorization entry from the authorization file. The
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default timeout is 60 seconds.
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The \fBgroup\fP option specifies the application group that clients
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connecting with this authorization should belong to. See the
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application group extension specification for more details. The
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default is to not belong to an application group.
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The \fBdata\fP option specifies data that the server should use to
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generate the authorization. Note that this is \fBnot\fP the same data
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that gets written to the authorization file. The interpretation of
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this data depends on the authorization protocol. The \fIhexdata\fP is
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in the same format as the \fIhexkey\fP described in the add command.
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The default is to send no data.
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.TP 8
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.B "[n]extract \fIfilename displayname..."
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Authorization entries for each of the specified displays are written to the
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indicated file. If the \fInextract\fP command is used, the entries are written
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in a numeric format suitable for non-binary transmission (such as secure
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electronic mail). The extracted entries can be read back in using the
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\fImerge\fP and \fInmerge\fP commands. If the filename consists of
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just a single dash, the entries will be written to the standard output.
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.TP 8
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.B "[n]list \fR[\fIdisplayname\fP...]"
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Authorization entries for each of the specified displays (or all if no
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displays are named) are printed on the standard output. If the \fInlist\fP
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command is used, entries will be shown in the numeric format used by
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the \fInextract\fP command; otherwise, they are shown in a textual format.
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Key data is always displayed in the hexadecimal format given in the
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description of the \fIadd\fP command.
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.TP 8
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.B "[n]merge \fR[\fIfilename\fP...]"
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Authorization entries are read from the specified files and are merged into
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the authorization database, superceding any matching existing entries. If
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the \fInmerge\fP command is used, the numeric format given in the description
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of the \fIextract\fP command is used. If a filename consists of just a single
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dash, the standard input will be read if it hasn't been read before.
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.TP 8
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.B "remove \fIdisplayname\fR..."
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Authorization entries matching the specified displays are removed from the
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authority file.
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.TP 8
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.B "source \fIfilename"
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The specified file is treated as a script containing \fIxauth\fP commands
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to execute. Blank lines and lines beginning with a sharp sign (#) are
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ignored. A single dash may be used to indicate the standard input, if it
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hasn't already been read.
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.TP 8
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.B "info"
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Information describing the authorization file, whether or not any changes
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have been made, and from where \fIxauth\fP commands are being read
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is printed on the standard output.
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.TP 8
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.B "exit"
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If any modifications have been made, the authority file is written out (if
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allowed), and the program exits. An end of file is treated as an implicit
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\fIexit\fP command.
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.TP 8
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.B "quit"
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The program exits, ignoring any modifications. This may also be accomplished
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by pressing the interrupt character.
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.TP 8
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.B "help [\fIstring\fP]"
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A description of all commands that begin with the given string (or all
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commands if no string is given) is printed on the standard output.
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.TP 8
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.B "?"
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A short list of the valid commands is printed on the standard output.
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.SH "DISPLAY NAMES"
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Display names for the \fIadd\fP, \fI[n]extract\fP, \fI[n]list\fP,
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\fI[n]merge\fP, and \fIremove\fP commands use the same format as the
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DISPLAY environment variable and the common \fI\-display\fP command line
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argument. Display-specific information (such as the screen number)
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is unnecessary and will be ignored.
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Same-machine connections (such as local-host sockets,
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shared memory, and the Internet Protocol hostname \fIlocalhost\fP) are
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referred to as \fIhostname\fP/unix:\fIdisplaynumber\fP so that
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local entries for different machines may be stored in one authority file.
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.SH EXAMPLE
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.PP
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The most common use for \fIxauth\fP is to extract the entry for the
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current display, copy it to another machine, and merge it into the
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user's authority file on the remote machine:
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.sp
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.nf
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% xauth extract \- $DISPLAY | rsh otherhost xauth merge \-
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.fi
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.PP
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.sp
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The following command contacts the server :0 to create an
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authorization using the MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 protocol. Clients that
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connect with this authorization will be untrusted.
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.nf
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% xauth generate :0 .
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.fi
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.SH ENVIRONMENT
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This \fIxauth\fP program uses the following environment variables:
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.TP 8
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.B XAUTHORITY
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to get the name of the authority file to use if the \fI\-f\fP option isn't
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used.
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.TP 8
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.B HOME
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to get the user's home directory if XAUTHORITY isn't defined.
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.SH FILES
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.TP 8
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.I $HOME/.Xauthority
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default authority file if XAUTHORITY isn't defined.
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.SH BUGS
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.PP
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Users that have unsecure networks should take care to use encrypted
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file transfer mechanisms to copy authorization entries between machines.
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Similarly, the \fIMIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1\fP protocol is not very useful in
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unsecure environments. Sites that are interested in additional security
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may need to use encrypted authorization mechanisms such as Kerberos.
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.PP
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Spaces are currently not allowed in the protocol name. Quoting could be
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added for the truly perverse.
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.SH AUTHOR
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Jim Fulton, MIT X Consortium
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