Linux UID & GID
Links 104 Linux Index
UID & GID¶
- UID: User Identifier
- GID: Group Identifier
- A UID (user identifier) is a number assigned by Linux to each user on the system.
- This number is used to identify the user to the system and to determine which system resources the user can access.
- It is user's representation in the linux kernel.
- UIDs are stored in the /etc/passwd file:
Root has a UID and GID of 0.
- These numbers are what give the root account its overwhelming power. If you don't believe me, rename the root account to
goonygoogoo
, or whatever you choose, and then create a new user account namedroot
, allowing the system to assign the next available UID and GID to it. This account has no more power than any other user account on the system. - It's not the name, but the UID and the GID that give the administration account its power. To further test this assertion, assign a test user account with 0 for the UID and GID, and that user is now root, regardless of the account name.
- Most Linux distributions reserve the first 100 UIDs for system use.
- New users are assigned UIDs starting from 500 or 1000.
- For example, new users in Ubuntu start from 1000:
- The theory behind this arbitrary assignment is that anything below 1000 is reserved for system accounts, services, and other special accounts, and regular user UIDs and GIDs stay above 1000.
- Groups in Linux are defined by GIDs (group IDs).
- Just like with UIDs, the first 100 GIDs are usually reserved for system use.
- GIDs are stored in the /etc/groups file
- We can find the id of the user using
id
- Processes have owners just like files.
- Only the owner (or the root user) of a process can send process signals to it.
References¶
Last updated: 2022-09-23