Am 16. Mär, 2015 schwätzte Michael Havens so: moin moin Mike, useradd has an option for adding multiple groups, but you probably need to specify to make a home directory and bash for the default shell. sudo useradd -m -s /bin/bash -Gaudio,video,input,dialout,plugdev,tty pi Looks like adduser might be able to do it in one go if you use --add_extra_groups. Or, you can add the user, then use usermod to add the extra groups. This probably works best for you based on what you were doing. sudo adduser pi sudo usermod -a -Gaudio,video,input,dialout,plugdev,tty pi In all cases, check syntax as I didn't verify the command lines I wrote up work as is :). ciao, der.hans > I wrote something and was wondering if I could shorten it. I wrote: > > sudo adduser pi audio > sudo adduser pi video > sudo adduser pi input > sudo adduser pi dialout > sudo adduser pi plugdev > sudo adduser pi tty > > And was thinking I could shorten it to: > > sudo adduser pi{ audio video input dialout plugdev tty} > > Would that work? If not how should I do it? > :-)~MIKE~(-: > -- # http://www.LuftHans.com/ http://www.PhxLinux.org/ # Whenever I hear anyone arguing for slavery, I feel a strong impulse to # see it tried on him personally. -- Abraham Lincoln