27

I'm attempting to code a script that outputs each user and their group on their own line like so:

user1 group1  
user2 group1  
user3 group2  
...  
user10 group6

etc.

I'm writing up a script in python for this but was wondering how SO might do this.

p.s. Take a whack at it in any language but I'd prefer python.

EDIT: I'm working on Linux. Ubuntu 8.10 or CentOS =)

4
  • Which operating system are you working with? Jan 7, 2009 at 19:05
  • Thanks for that comment, without it I'd have no clue what this question was about (users? groups? of WHAT?).
    – Ole
    Jan 7, 2009 at 19:10
  • Note that a user can be (and often is) in multiple groups. Jan 7, 2009 at 19:20
  • This is one of those questions that the OP was really trying to ask ChatGPT, but it hadn't been invented yet.
    – Rob Grant
    Jun 27, 2023 at 8:30

5 Answers 5

32

For *nix, you have the pwd and grp modules. You iterate through pwd.getpwall() to get all users. You look up their group names with grp.getgrgid(gid).

import pwd, grp
for p in pwd.getpwall():
    print p[0], grp.getgrgid(p[3])[0]
1
  • 5
    pwd.getpwall only shows local users, not users that come from e.g. ldap (when enumerate=false) Apr 11, 2018 at 14:24
17

the grp module is your friend. Look at grp.getgrall() to get a list of all groups and their members.

EDIT example:

import grp
groups = grp.getgrall()
for group in groups:
    for user in group[3]:
        print user, group[0]
4
  • This worked, but it seems, that its not listing all the users. Any thoughts? $ ./script.py | wc -l 81 $ sudo cat /etc/shadow | wc -l 406
    – Derek
    Jan 7, 2009 at 19:33
  • I think what i'm seeing is that the server I'm using this on has a ton of groups with no users in them (old, old groups) that happen to still be around. This script ignores groups with no users in them, which is fine, that's what I need! =)
    – Derek
    Jan 7, 2009 at 19:39
  • 2
    This solution only lists the users' secondary groups. My read of question was that it asks for "their group", ie the [singular] user's primary group? Jan 7, 2009 at 20:10
  • See S.Lott's answer for a solution which shows only the primary group
    – d0k
    Jan 8, 2009 at 14:00
5

sh/bash:

getent passwd | cut -f1 -d: | while read name; do echo -n "$name " ; groups $name ; done
1
  • 1
    He did, but he added "Take a whack at it in any language but I'd prefer python." Jan 9, 2009 at 9:52
5

The python call to grp.getgrall() only shows the local groups, unlike the call to getgrouplist c function which retruns all users, e.g. also users in sssd that is backed by an ldap but has enumeration turned off. (like in FreeIPA). After searching for the easiest way to get all groups a users belongs to in python the best way I found was to actually call the getgrouplist c function:

#!/usr/bin/python

import grp, pwd, os
from ctypes import *
from ctypes.util import find_library

libc = cdll.LoadLibrary(find_library('libc'))

getgrouplist = libc.getgrouplist
# 50 groups should be enought?
ngroups = 50
getgrouplist.argtypes = [c_char_p, c_uint, POINTER(c_uint * ngroups), POINTER(c_int)]
getgrouplist.restype = c_int32

grouplist = (c_uint * ngroups)()
ngrouplist = c_int(ngroups)

user = pwd.getpwuid(2540485)

ct = getgrouplist(user.pw_name, user.pw_gid, byref(grouplist), byref(ngrouplist))

# if 50 groups was not enough this will be -1, try again
# luckily the last call put the correct number of groups in ngrouplist
if ct < 0:
    getgrouplist.argtypes = [c_char_p, c_uint, POINTER(c_uint *int(ngrouplist.value)), POINTER(c_int)]
    grouplist = (c_uint * int(ngrouplist.value))()
    ct = getgrouplist(user.pw_name, user.pw_gid, byref(grouplist), byref(ngrouplist))

for i in xrange(0, ct):
    gid = grouplist[i]
    print grp.getgrgid(gid).gr_name

Getting a list of all users to run this function on similarly would require to figure out what c call is made by getent passwd and call that in python.

2
  • To make this Python3 friendly, since bytes and strings are more separated and automatic encoding doesn't occur. getgrouplist should have a bytes string as its first argument like so: getgrouplist(bytes(user.pw_name, 'UTF-8'), ...). Obviously xrange is range in Python3 as well. But that clears up any conversion issues from Python2 to Python3.
    – Torxed
    Jun 3, 2020 at 7:44
  • On my system (rhel), find_library('libc') returned None. It seemed to work anyways, perhaps indicating that libc is the default, but I would still recommend using find_library('c') instead.
    – Quantum7
    Dec 8, 2020 at 9:37
1

a simple function which is capable to deal with the structure of any one of these files (/etc/passwd and /etc/group).

I believe that this code meets your needs, with Python built-in functions and no additional module:

#!/usr/bin/python


def read_and_parse(filename):
    """
        Reads and parses lines from /etc/passwd and /etc/group.

        Parameters

          filename : str
            Full path for filename.
    """
    data = []
    with open(filename, "r") as f:
        for line in f.readlines():
            data.append(line.split(":")[0])
        data.sort()
        for item in data:
            print("- " + item)


read_and_parse("/etc/group")
read_and_parse("/etc/passwd")
1
  • Misses LDAP groups.
    – Quantum7
    Nov 23, 2020 at 14:34

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