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I'm trying to get a list of all users and all groups on Mac OS X 10.5+. How can I do this?

For example, the list of all users on my machine should return: _amavisd, _appowner, _appserver, _ard, _atsserver, _calendar, _carddav, _clamav, _coreaudiod, _cvmsroot, _cvs, _cyrus, _devdocs, _dovecot, _eppc, _installer, _jabber, _lda, _locationd, _lp, _mailman, _mcxalr, _mdnsresponder, _mysql, _pcastagent, _pcastserver, _postfix, _qtss, _sandbox, _screensaver, _securityagent, _serialnumberd, _softwareupdate, _spotlight, _sshd, _svn, _teamsserver, _timezone, _tokend, _trustevaluationagent, _unknown, _update_sharing, _usbmuxd, _uucp, _windowserver, _www, _xgridagent, _xgridcontroller, daemon, dave, nobody, root (that was painstakingly compiled manually).

How can I get that list (and the corresponding list of all groups) programmatically? I'm open to alternative (non-c based) solutions, such as Applescript, commandline, etc.

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Sadly, the fact that you were able to make that exhaustive list manually suggests that you already had a way to automate it. You presumably read a list of directory names or something? Great question to ask though. Google turned up the answer in about 15 seconds. – TheJacobTaylor Aug 20 at 3:28
I got it from another program. – Dave DeLong Aug 20 at 3:34
Clarification: the other program had the list in a popupbutton, and I copied it out. I want a similar popupbutton. =) As for google, I spent a while searching for variations on "mac get list of all users" and couldn't find anything relevant. – Dave DeLong Aug 20 at 3:36

5 Answers

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The tool you want is almost certainly dscl. The shortest way to do it was already pointed out:

$ dscl . list /users
$ dscl . list /groups

If you want to output information about each user, though, use readall:

$ dscl . readall /users
$ dscl . readall /groups

And if you need to programatically parse said information, use -plist to make your life easier:

$ dscl -plist . readall /users
$ dscl -plist . readall /groups
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Non-garbbled/no-tempfile commands:

# dscl . list /users
# dscl . list /groups
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Wow, even better! I love this site! =) – Dave DeLong Aug 20 at 2:22
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check out, for example, dsexport.

Here are some examples:

dsexport /tmp/export.out /Local/Default dsRecTypeStandard:Groups

dsexport /tmp/export.out /Local/Default dsRecTypeStandard:Users

the outputs are a bit rubbish, but something like sed could clean them up for you.

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Excellent! Just a simple pass with a regular expression has cleaned them right up! Thank you! – Dave DeLong Aug 20 at 2:10
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Open Directory approach (from: http://rickcogley.blogspot.com/2008/11/listing-open-directory-users-on-os-x.html):

dscacheutil -q user
dscacheutil -q group

Take each line from the respective output that starts with "name:" strip off the "name:" and you have your list. If you do not have dscacheutil, you can use the manual commands:

root# dscl localhost list /Local/Default/Users
root# dscl localhost list /LDAPv3/127.0.0.1/Users

Old school approach for before Open Directory....(sigh): For list of users:

  • Grab the /etc/passwd file from the system.
  • Split it out by lines
  • Split out each line based on ":"
  • Take the first symbol for each line

For list of groups:

  • Grab the /etc/group file from the system.
  • Split it out by lines
  • Split out each line based on ":"
  • Take the first symbol for each line
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I don't think this works - grepping /etc/passwd on my mac doesn't yield my username. – Peter Aug 20 at 2:01
+1 same here, but it seems like it has everything else. Thanks! I'll keep this open in case there's a better way. – Dave DeLong Aug 20 at 2:06
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I believe that Directory Services replaces /etc/passwd. The file is probably only there for legacy reasons. – Dana the Sane Aug 20 at 2:08
+1 Great point, I have updated my answer. thanks! – TheJacobTaylor Aug 20 at 3:18
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Back in the old days, we'd do this trivially with the NetInfo Kit, but today there's no tidy Objective-C way to do it. You'll have to dig in to the OpenDirectory API.

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