Provided by: atfs-dev_1.4pl6-13_amd64 bug

NAME

       atUserValid, atScanUser, atUserName, atUserUid - user handling

SYNOPSIS

       #include <atfs.h>
       #include <atfstk.h>

       void atScanUser (char *userName; Af_user *resultUser);

       char* atUserName (Af_user *user);

       Uid_t atUserUid (Af_user *user);

       int atUserValid (Af_user *user);

DESCRIPTION

       atScanUser scans the given string userName and tries to derive an AtFS user identification
       (resultUser) from  it.   It  does  not  verify  the  existence  of  a  corresponding  UNIX
       (/etc/passwd) user entry. Use atUserUid to test that. atScanUser understands the following
       formats:

       user        When the string does not contain an at sign, it is considered to  be  a  plain
                   user name from the current host and domain.

       user@host   In  the  case  that the part after the at sign doe not contain a period, it is
                   assumed to be a hostname. Domain is the current domain.

       user@host.domain
                   This format can only be recognized, when the given  domain  is  equal  to  the
                   current  domain,  and  the  hostname  remains  as rest between the at sign and
                   domain name.

       user@domain
                   An user identification string with a domain name different to the local domain
                   is treated as user@domain, although this might be wrong.

       atUserName  returns  a  string  of  the  form  user@domain  generated  from the given user
       structure. If no domain name is given in the structure, it returns user@host instead. With
       no  host  and  no  domain name, just user is returned. The result string resides in static
       memory and will be overwritten on subsequent calls.

       atUserUid tries to map the given user structure to a UNIX user identification. It  returns
       the uid on success, -1 otherwise.

       atUserValid  checks  the  given  user  structure  for  plausibility.  It  returns FALSE on
       fauilure, a non null value on success.