]> chpasswd 8 System Management Commands chpasswd update passwords in batch mode chpasswd options DESCRIPTION The chpasswd command reads a list of user name and password pairs from standard input and uses this information to update a group of existing users. Each line is of the format: user_name:password By default the supplied password must be in clear-text, and is encrypted by chpasswd. Also the password age will be updated, if present. The default encryption algorithm can be defined for the system with the ENCRYPT_METHOD variable of /etc/login.defs, and can be overwiten with the , , or options. This command is intended to be used in a large system environment where many accounts are created at a single time. OPTIONS The options which apply to the chpasswd command are: , Use the specified method to encrypt the passwords. The available methods are DES, MD5, NONE, and SHA256 or SHA512 if your libc support these methods. , Supplied passwords are in encrypted form. , Display help message and exit. , Use MD5 encryption instead of DES when the supplied passwords are not encrypted. , Use the specified number of rounds to encrypt the passwords. The value 0 means that the system will choose the default number of rounds for the crypt method (5000). A minimal value of 1000 and a maximal value of 999,999,999 will be enforced. You can only use this option with the SHA256 or SHA512 crypt method. By default, the number of rounds is defined by the SHA_CRYPT_MIN_ROUNDS and SHA_CRYPT_MAX_ROUNDS variables in /etc/login.defs. CAVEATS Remember to set permissions or umask to prevent readability of unencrypted files by other users. PAM is not used to update the passwords. Only /etc/passwd and /etc/shadow are updated, and the various checks or options provided by PAM modules are not used. CONFIGURATION The following configuration variables in /etc/login.defs change the behavior of this tool: &ENCRYPT_METHOD; &MD5_CRYPT_ENAB; &SHA_CRYPT_MIN_ROUNDS; FILES /etc/passwd User account information. /etc/shadow Secure user account information. /etc/login.defs Shadow password suite configuration. SEE ALSO passwd1 , newusers8 , useradd8 , login.defs5 .