Am 18. Apr, 2002 schwätzte Craig White so:
> btw...webmin <http://www.webmin.com> is what I like to use for this type
> of thing (user administration). You can set defaults (group, shell, home
> directory location, auto-add to smbpasswd) and more.
You can setup defaults for useradd in /etc/default/useradd, but useradd on
debian defaults to /bin/bash without something in /etc/default/useradd.
useradd is much easier to use in a script than webmin :).
ciao,
der.hans
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