If you are integrating your stand-alone machine into an existing local network, you might find that your local user id is different from your network user ID. In order to access network resources as you, you need a single UID. In this example, you are the user nouchine and your local machine is connected to a netinfo server called server. |
Compare the local and network UID: |
niutil -read . /users/nouchine | grep uid uid: 501 niutil -read -t server/network /users/nouchine | grep uid uid: 2645 |
Or if you are on NIS: |
ypcat passwd.byname | grep nouchine | cut -d: -f4 2645 |
In this example, your local UID is 501 and your network UID
is 2645. We will change the local UID to 2645. Since these are
different, you will not be able to write to your NFS
directories. To change your local UID, perform the
following: |
niutil -createprop . /users/nouchine uid 2645
|
(2) Change the owner of your files from the old uid to the
new one. This needs to be done on every file system that you
wrote to as the old user. At a minimum, this will be
/Users/nouchine and /Library, and you might find others.
|
find /Users/nouchine -user 501 -exec chown 5464 {} \;
|
There are a few files that have the old uid as part of their names: |