]> git.ipfire.org Git - thirdparty/systemd.git/blame - man/homectl.xml
man: update version information
[thirdparty/systemd.git] / man / homectl.xml
CommitLineData
ea7a19e9
LP
1<?xml version='1.0'?>
2<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
3 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
db9ecf05 4<!-- SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-or-later -->
ea7a19e9
LP
5
6<refentry id="homectl" conditional='ENABLE_HOMED'
7 xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude">
8
9 <refentryinfo>
10 <title>homectl</title>
11 <productname>systemd</productname>
12 </refentryinfo>
13
14 <refmeta>
15 <refentrytitle>homectl</refentrytitle>
16 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
17 </refmeta>
18
19 <refnamediv>
20 <refname>homectl</refname>
21 <refpurpose>Create, remove, change or inspect home directories</refpurpose>
22 </refnamediv>
23
24 <refsynopsisdiv>
25 <cmdsynopsis>
26 <command>homectl</command>
27 <arg choice="opt" rep="repeat">OPTIONS</arg>
28 <arg choice="req">COMMAND</arg>
29 <arg choice="opt" rep="repeat">NAME</arg>
30 </cmdsynopsis>
31 </refsynopsisdiv>
32
33 <refsect1>
34 <title>Description</title>
35
36 <para><command>homectl</command> may be used to create, remove, change or inspect a user's home
37 directory. It's primarily a command interfacing with
38 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-homed.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>
39 which manages home directories of users.</para>
40
41 <para>Home directories managed by <filename>systemd-homed.service</filename> are self-contained, and thus
2a4be3c5
ZJS
42 include the user's full metadata record in the home's data storage itself, making them easy to migrate
43 between machines. In particular, a home directory describes a matching user record, and every user record
44 managed by <filename>systemd-homed.service</filename> also implies existence and encapsulation of a home
45 directory. The user account and home directory become the same concept.</para>
46
47 <para>The following backing storage mechanisms are supported:</para>
ea7a19e9
LP
48
49 <itemizedlist>
2a4be3c5
ZJS
50 <listitem><para>An individual LUKS2 encrypted loopback file for a user, stored in
51 <filename>/home/*.home</filename>. At login the file system contained in this files is mounted, after
52 the LUKS2 encrypted volume has been attached. The user's password is identical to the encryption
86b52a39 53 passphrase of the LUKS2 volume. Access to data without preceding user authentication is thus not
2a4be3c5 54 possible, even for the system administrator. This storage mechanism provides the strongest data
ea7a19e9
LP
55 security and is thus recommended.</para></listitem>
56
57 <listitem><para>Similar, but the LUKS2 encrypted file system is located on regular block device, such
5bc9ea07 58 as a USB storage stick. In this mode home directories and all data they include are nicely migratable
ea7a19e9
LP
59 between machines, simply by plugging the USB stick into different systems at different
60 times.</para></listitem>
61
62 <listitem><para>An encrypted directory using <literal>fscrypt</literal> on file systems that support it
63 (at the moment this is primarily <literal>ext4</literal>), located in
64 <filename>/home/*.homedir</filename>. This mechanism also provides encryption, but substantially
2a4be3c5 65 weaker than LUKS2, as most file system metadata is unprotected. Moreover
ea7a19e9
LP
66 it currently does not support changing user passwords once the home directory has been
67 created.</para></listitem>
68
69 <listitem><para>A <literal>btrfs</literal> subvolume for each user, also located in
70 <filename>/home/*.homedir</filename>. This provides no encryption, but good quota
71 support.</para></listitem>
72
73 <listitem><para>A regular directory for each user, also located in
74 <filename>/home/*.homedir</filename>. This provides no encryption, but is a suitable fallback
75 available on all machines, even where LUKS2, <literal>fscrypt</literal> or <literal>btrfs</literal>
76 support is not available.</para></listitem>
77
78 <listitem><para>An individual Windows file share (CIFS) for each user.</para></listitem>
79 </itemizedlist>
80
81 <para>Note that <filename>systemd-homed.service</filename> and <command>homectl</command> will not manage
82 "classic" UNIX user accounts as created with <citerefentry
83 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>useradd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry> or
84 similar tools. In particular, this functionality is not suitable for managing system users (i.e. users
85 with a UID below 1000) but is exclusive to regular ("human") users.</para>
86
87 <para>Note that users/home directories managed via <command>systemd-homed.service</command> do not show
88 up in <filename>/etc/passwd</filename> and similar files, they are synthesized via glibc NSS during
89 runtime. They are thus resolvable and may be enumerated via the <citerefentry
90 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>getent</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>
91 tool.</para>
92
93 <para>This tool interfaces directly with <filename>systemd-homed.service</filename>, and may execute
94 specific commands on the home directories it manages. Since every home directory managed that way also
95 defines a JSON user and group record these home directories may also be inspected and enumerated via
96 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>userdbctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para>
97
98 <para>Home directories managed by <filename>systemd-homed.service</filename> are usually in one of two
99 states, or in a transition state between them: when <literal>active</literal> they are unlocked and
100 mounted, and thus accessible to the system and its programs; when <literal>inactive</literal> they are
2a4be3c5 101 not mounted and thus not accessible. Activation happens automatically at login of the user and usually
ea7a19e9
LP
102 can only complete after a password (or other authentication token) has been supplied. Deactivation
103 happens after the user fully logged out. A home directory remains active as long as the user is logged in
104 at least once, i.e. has at least one login session. When the user logs in a second time simultaneously
105 the home directory remains active. It is deactivated only after the last of the user's sessions
106 ends.</para>
107 </refsect1>
108
109 <refsect1>
110 <title>Options</title>
111
112 <para>The following general options are understood (further options that control the various properties
113 of user records managed by <filename>systemd-homed.service</filename> are documented further
114 down):</para>
115
116 <variablelist>
117
118 <varlistentry>
119 <term><option>--identity=</option><replaceable>FILE</replaceable></term>
120
121 <listitem><para>Read the user's JSON record from the specified file. If passed as
e9dd6984 122 <literal>-</literal> read the user record from standard input. The supplied JSON object must follow
885a4e6c 123 the structure documented in <ulink url="https://systemd.io/USER_RECORD">JSON User Records</ulink>.
e9dd6984 124 This option may be used in conjunction with the <command>create</command> and
ea7a19e9 125 <command>update</command> commands (see below), where it allows configuring the user record in JSON
ec07c3c8
AK
126 as-is, instead of setting the individual user record properties (see below).</para>
127
128 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
129 </varlistentry>
130
131 <varlistentry>
132 <term><option>--json=</option><replaceable>FORMAT</replaceable></term>
2a703778 133 <term><option>-j</option></term>
ea7a19e9
LP
134
135 <listitem><para>Controls whether to output the user record in JSON format, if the
136 <command>inspect</command> command (see below) is used. Takes one of <literal>pretty</literal>,
137 <literal>short</literal> or <literal>off</literal>. If <literal>pretty</literal> human-friendly
138 whitespace and newlines are inserted in the output to make the JSON data more readable. If
139 <literal>short</literal> all superfluous whitespace is suppressed. If <literal>off</literal> (the
140 default) the user information is not shown in JSON format but in a friendly human readable formatting
2a703778 141 instead. The <option>-j</option> option picks <literal>pretty</literal> when run interactively and
aefdc112
AK
142 <literal>short</literal> otherwise.</para>
143
144 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
145 </varlistentry>
146
147 <varlistentry>
148 <term><option>--export-format=</option><replaceable>FORMAT</replaceable></term>
149 <term><option>-E</option></term>
150 <term><option>-EE</option></term>
151
152 <listitem><para>When used with the <command>inspect</command> verb in JSON mode (see above) may be
153 used to suppress certain aspects of the JSON user record on output. Specifically, if
154 <literal>stripped</literal> format is used the binding and runtime fields of the record are
155 removed. If <literal>minimal</literal> format is used the cryptographic signature is removed too. If
156 <literal>full</literal> format is used the full JSON record is shown (this is the default). This
157 option is useful for copying an existing user record to a different system in order to create a
158 similar user there with the same settings. Specifically: <command>homectl inspect -EE | ssh
159 root@othersystem homectl create -i-</command> may be used as simple command line for replicating a
160 user on another host. <option>-E</option> is equivalent to <option>-j --export-format=stripped</option>,
161 <option>-EE</option> to <option>-j --export-format=minimal</option>. Note that when replicating user
162 accounts user records acquired in <literal>stripped</literal> mode will retain the original
2a4be3c5
ZJS
163 cryptographic signatures and thus may only be modified when the private key to update them is available
164 on the destination machine. When replicating users in <literal>minimal</literal> mode, the signature
165 is removed during the replication and thus the record will be implicitly signed with the key of the destination
ec07c3c8
AK
166 machine and may be updated there without any private key replication.</para>
167
168 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
169 </varlistentry>
170
171 <xi:include href="user-system-options.xml" xpointer="host" />
172 <xi:include href="user-system-options.xml" xpointer="machine" />
173
174 <xi:include href="standard-options.xml" xpointer="no-pager" />
175 <xi:include href="standard-options.xml" xpointer="no-legend" />
176 <xi:include href="standard-options.xml" xpointer="no-ask-password" />
177 <xi:include href="standard-options.xml" xpointer="help" />
178 <xi:include href="standard-options.xml" xpointer="version" />
179 </variablelist>
180 </refsect1>
181
182 <refsect1>
183 <title>User Record Properties</title>
184
185 <para>The following options control various properties of the user records/home directories that
186 <filename>systemd-homed.service</filename> manages. These switches may be used in conjunction with the
187 <command>create</command> and <command>update</command> commands for configuring various aspects of the
188 home directory and the user account:</para>
189
190 <variablelist>
191
192 <varlistentry>
193 <term><option>--real-name=</option><replaceable>NAME</replaceable></term>
194 <term><option>-c</option> <replaceable>NAME</replaceable></term>
195
196 <listitem><para>The real name for the user. This corresponds with the GECOS field on classic UNIX NSS
ec07c3c8
AK
197 records.</para>
198
199 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
200 </varlistentry>
201
202 <varlistentry>
203 <term><option>--realm=</option><replaceable>REALM</replaceable></term>
204
205 <listitem><para>The realm for the user. The realm associates a user with a specific organization or
d008666a 206 installation, and allows distinguishing users of the same name defined in different contexts. The
ea7a19e9
LP
207 realm can be any string that also qualifies as valid DNS domain name, and it is recommended to use
208 the organization's or installation's domain name for this purpose, but this is not enforced nor
209 required. On each system only a single user of the same name may exist, and if a user with the same
210 name and realm is seen it is assumed to refer to the same user while a user with the same name but
211 different realm is considered a different user. Note that this means that two users sharing the same
212 name but with distinct realms are not allowed on the same system. Assigning a realm to a user is
ec07c3c8
AK
213 optional.</para>
214
215 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
216 </varlistentry>
217
218 <varlistentry>
219 <term><option>--email-address=</option><replaceable>EMAIL</replaceable></term>
220
221 <listitem><para>Takes an electronic mail address to associate with the user. On log-in the
ec07c3c8
AK
222 <varname>$EMAIL</varname> environment variable is initialized from this value.</para>
223
224 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
225 </varlistentry>
226
227 <varlistentry>
228 <term><option>--location=</option><replaceable>TEXT</replaceable></term>
229
230 <listitem><para>Takes location specification for this user. This is free-form text, which might or
231 might not be usable by geo-location applications. Example: <option>--location="Berlin,
ec07c3c8
AK
232 Germany"</option> or <option>--location="Basement, Room 3a"</option></para>
233
234 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
235 </varlistentry>
236
237 <varlistentry>
238 <term><option>--icon-name=</option><replaceable>ICON</replaceable></term>
239
240 <listitem><para>Takes an icon name to associate with the user, following the scheme defined by the <ulink
241 url="https://standards.freedesktop.org/icon-naming-spec/icon-naming-spec-latest.html">Icon Naming
ec07c3c8
AK
242 Specification</ulink>.</para>
243
244 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
245 </varlistentry>
246
247 <varlistentry>
248 <term><option>--home-dir=</option><replaceable>PATH</replaceable></term>
249 <term><option>-d</option><replaceable>PATH</replaceable></term>
250
251 <listitem><para>Takes a path to use as home directory for the user. Note that this is the directory
252 the user's home directory is mounted to while the user is logged in. This is not where the user's
253 data is actually stored, see <option>--image-path=</option> for that. If not specified defaults to
ec07c3c8
AK
254 <filename>/home/$USER</filename>.</para>
255
256 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
257 </varlistentry>
258
259 <varlistentry>
260 <term><option>--uid=</option><replaceable>UID</replaceable></term>
261
262 <listitem><para>Takes a preferred numeric UNIX UID to assign this user. If a user is to be created
263 with the specified UID and it is already taken by a different user on the local system then creation
264 of the home directory is refused. Note though, if after creating the home directory it is used on a
265 different system and the configured UID is taken by another user there, then
266 <command>systemd-homed</command> may assign the user a different UID on that system. The specified
267 UID must be outside of the system user range. It is recommended to use the 60001…60513 UID range for
e9dd6984
ZJS
268 this purpose. If not specified, the UID is automatically picked. If the home directory is found to be
269 owned by a different UID when logging in, the home directory and everything underneath it will have
270 its ownership changed automatically before login completes.</para>
ea7a19e9
LP
271
272 <para>Note that users managed by <command>systemd-homed</command> always have a matching group
273 associated with the same name as well as a GID matching the UID of the user. Thus, configuring the
ec07c3c8
AK
274 GID separately is not permitted.</para>
275
276 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
277 </varlistentry>
278
279 <varlistentry>
280 <term><option>--member-of=</option><replaceable>GROUP</replaceable></term>
281 <term><option>-G</option> <replaceable>GROUP</replaceable></term>
282
283 <listitem><para>Takes a comma-separated list of auxiliary UNIX groups this user shall belong
284 to. Example: <option>--member-of=wheel</option> to provide the user with administrator
285 privileges. Note that <command>systemd-homed</command> does not manage any groups besides a group
286 matching the user in name and numeric UID/GID. Thus any groups listed here must be registered
287 independently, for example with <citerefentry
e9dd6984
ZJS
288 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>groupadd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
289 Any non-existent groups are ignored. This option may be used more than once, in which case all
290 specified group lists are combined. If the user is currently a member of a group which is not listed,
ec07c3c8
AK
291 the user will be removed from the group.</para>
292
293 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
294 </varlistentry>
295
fada2c75
LP
296 <varlistentry>
297 <term><option>--capability-bounding-set=</option><replaceable>CAPABILITIES</replaceable></term>
298 <term><option>--capability-ambient-set=</option><replaceable>CAPABILITIES</replaceable></term>
299
300 <listitem><para>These options take a space separated list of process capabilities
301 (e.g. <constant>CAP_WAKE_ALARM</constant>, <constant>CAP_BLOCK_SUSPEND</constant>, …) that shall be
302 set in the capability bounding and ambient sets for all the user's sessions. See <citerefentry
303 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>capabilities</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>
304 for details on the capabilities concept. These options may be used more than once, in which case the
305 specified lists are combined. If the parameter begins with a <literal>~</literal> character the
ec07c3c8
AK
306 effect is inverted: the specified capability is dropped from the specific set.</para>
307
308 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v254"/></listitem>
fada2c75
LP
309 </varlistentry>
310
ea7a19e9
LP
311 <varlistentry>
312 <term><option>--skel=</option><replaceable>PATH</replaceable></term>
313
314 <listitem><para>Takes a file system path to a directory. Specifies the skeleton directory to
e9dd6984
ZJS
315 initialize the home directory with. All files and directories in the specified path are copied into
316 any newly create home directory. If not specified defaults to <filename>/etc/skel/</filename>.
ec07c3c8
AK
317 </para>
318
319 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
320 </varlistentry>
321
322 <varlistentry>
323 <term><option>--shell=</option><replaceable>SHELL</replaceable></term>
324
325 <listitem><para>Takes a file system path. Specifies the shell binary to execute on terminal
ec07c3c8
AK
326 logins. If not specified defaults to <filename>/bin/bash</filename>.</para>
327
328 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
329 </varlistentry>
330
331 <varlistentry>
4bbafcc3 332 <term><option>--setenv=</option><replaceable>VARIABLE</replaceable>[=<replaceable>VALUE</replaceable>]</term>
ea7a19e9 333
4bbafcc3
ZJS
334 <listitem><para>Takes an environment variable assignment to set for all user processes. May be used
335 multiple times to set multiple environment variables. When <literal>=</literal> and
336 <replaceable>VALUE</replaceable> are omitted, the value of the variable with the same name in the
337 program environment will be used.</para>
338
339 <para>Note that a number of other settings also result in environment variables to be set for the
340 user, including <option>--email=</option>, <option>--timezone=</option> and
ec07c3c8
AK
341 <option>--language=</option>.</para>
342
aefdc112 343 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
344 </varlistentry>
345
346 <varlistentry>
347 <term><option>--timezone=</option><replaceable>TIMEZONE</replaceable></term>
348
7fd897c5
ZJS
349 <listitem><para>Takes a time zone location name that sets the timezone for the specified user. When
350 the user logs in the <varname>$TZ</varname> environment variable is initialized from this
351 setting. Example: <option>--timezone=Europe/Amsterdam</option> will result in the environment
352 variable <literal>TZ=:Europe/Amsterdam</literal>. (<literal>:</literal> is used intentionally as part
353 of the timezone specification, see
21556381 354 <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>tzset</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>.)
ec07c3c8
AK
355 </para>
356
357 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
358 </varlistentry>
359
360 <varlistentry>
361 <term><option>--language=</option><replaceable>LANG</replaceable></term>
362
363 <listitem><para>Takes a specifier indicating the preferred language of the user. The
364 <varname>$LANG</varname> environment variable is initialized from this value on login, and thus a
365 value suitable for this environment variable is accepted here, for example
ec07c3c8
AK
366 <option>--language=de_DE.UTF8</option>.</para>
367
368 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
369 </varlistentry>
370
371 <varlistentry>
372 <term><option>--ssh-authorized-keys=</option><replaceable>KEYS</replaceable></term>
373 <listitem><para>Either takes a SSH authorized key line to associate with the user record or a
374 <literal>@</literal> character followed by a path to a file to read one or more such lines from. SSH
375 keys configured this way are made available to SSH to permit access to this home directory and user
ec07c3c8
AK
376 record. This option may be used more than once to configure multiple SSH keys.</para>
377
378 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
379 </varlistentry>
380
381 <varlistentry>
382 <term><option>--pkcs11-token-uri=</option><replaceable>URI</replaceable></term>
383 <listitem><para>Takes an RFC 7512 PKCS#11 URI referencing a security token (e.g. YubiKey or PIV
384 smartcard) that shall be able to unlock the user account. The security token URI should reference a
385 security token with exactly one pair of X.509 certificate and private key. A random secret key is
386 then generated, encrypted with the public key of the X.509 certificate, and stored as part of the
387 user record. At login time it is decrypted with the PKCS#11 module and then used to unlock the
e9dd6984
ZJS
388 account and associated resources. See below for an example how to set up authentication with a
389 security token.</para>
4442c269
LP
390
391 <para>Instead of a valid PKCS#11 URI, the special strings <literal>list</literal> and
392 <literal>auto</literal> may be specified. If <literal>list</literal> is passed, a brief table of
393 suitable, currently plugged in PKCS#11 hardware tokens is shown, along with their URIs. If
394 <literal>auto</literal> is passed, a suitable PKCS#11 hardware token is automatically selected (this
395 operation will fail if there isn't exactly one suitable token discovered). The latter is a useful
396 shortcut for the most common case where a single PKCS#11 hardware token is plugged in.</para>
397
398 <para>Note that many hardware security tokens implement both PKCS#11/PIV and FIDO2 with the
399 <literal>hmac-secret</literal> extension (for example: the YubiKey 5 series), as supported with the
400 <option>--fido2-device=</option> option below. Both mechanisms are similarly powerful, though FIDO2
401 is the more modern technology. PKCS#11/PIV tokens have the benefit of being recognizable before
402 authentication and hence can be used for implying the user identity to use for logging in, which
403 FIDO2 does not allow. PKCS#11/PIV devices generally require initialization (i.e. storing a
404 private/public key pair on them, see example below) before they can be used; FIDO2 security tokens
ec07c3c8
AK
405 generally do not required that, and work out of the box.</para>
406
407 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
4442c269
LP
408 </varlistentry>
409
70e723c0
M
410 <varlistentry>
411 <term><option>--fido2-credential-algorithm=</option><replaceable>STRING</replaceable></term>
412 <listitem><para>Specify COSE algorithm used in credential generation. The default value is
413 <literal>es256</literal>. Supported values are <literal>es256</literal>, <literal>rs256</literal>
414 and <literal>eddsa</literal>.</para>
415
416 <para><literal>es256</literal> denotes ECDSA over NIST P-256 with SHA-256. <literal>rs256</literal>
417 denotes 2048-bit RSA with PKCS#1.5 padding and SHA-256. <literal>eddsa</literal> denotes
418 EDDSA over Curve25519 with SHA-512.</para>
419
ec07c3c8
AK
420 <para>Note that your authenticator may not support some algorithms.</para>
421
422 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v251"/></listitem>
70e723c0
M
423 </varlistentry>
424
4442c269
LP
425 <varlistentry>
426 <term><option>--fido2-device=</option><replaceable>PATH</replaceable></term>
427
428 <listitem><para>Takes a path to a Linux <literal>hidraw</literal> device
429 (e.g. <filename>/dev/hidraw1</filename>), referring to a FIDO2 security token implementing the
e0c60bf6
ZJS
430 <literal>hmac-secret</literal> extension that shall be able to unlock the user account. A random salt
431 value is generated on the host and passed to the FIDO2 device, which calculates a HMAC hash of the
41b6ae4d
ZJS
432 salt using an internal secret key. The result is then used as the key to unlock the user account. The
433 random salt is included in the user record, so that whenever authentication is needed it can be
434 passed to the FIDO2 token again.</para>
4442c269
LP
435
436 <para>Instead of a valid path to a FIDO2 <literal>hidraw</literal> device the special strings
437 <literal>list</literal> and <literal>auto</literal> may be specified. If <literal>list</literal> is
438 passed, a brief table of suitable discovered FIDO2 devices is shown. If <literal>auto</literal> is
439 passed, a suitable FIDO2 token is automatically selected, if exactly one is discovered. The latter is
440 a useful shortcut for the most common case where a single FIDO2 hardware token is plugged in.</para>
441
442 <para>Note that FIDO2 devices suitable for this option must implement the
443 <literal>hmac-secret</literal> extension. Most current devices (such as the YubiKey 5 series) do. If
444 the extension is not implemented the device cannot be used for unlocking home directories.</para>
21505c93
LP
445
446 <para>The FIDO2 device may be subsequently removed by setting the device path to an empty string
6d5ea0f1 447 (e.g. <command>homectl update $USER --fido2-device=""</command>).</para>
4442c269
LP
448
449 <para>Note that many hardware security tokens implement both FIDO2 and PKCS#11/PIV (and thus may be
450 used with either <option>--fido2-device=</option> or <option>--pkcs11-token-uri=</option>), for a
ec07c3c8
AK
451 discussion see above.</para>
452
453 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v246"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
454 </varlistentry>
455
17e7561a
LP
456 <varlistentry>
457 <term><option>--fido2-with-client-pin=</option><replaceable>BOOL</replaceable></term>
458
459 <listitem><para>When enrolling a FIDO2 security token, controls whether to require the user to enter
460 a PIN when unlocking the account (the FIDO2 <literal>clientPin</literal> feature). Defaults to
461 <literal>yes</literal>. (Note: this setting is without effect if the security token does not support
462 the <literal>clientPin</literal> feature at all, or does not allow enabling or disabling
ec07c3c8
AK
463 it.)</para>
464
465 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v249"/></listitem>
17e7561a
LP
466 </varlistentry>
467
468 <varlistentry>
469 <term><option>--fido2-with-user-presence=</option><replaceable>BOOL</replaceable></term>
470
471 <listitem><para>When enrolling a FIDO2 security token, controls whether to require the user to
472 verify presence (tap the token, the FIDO2 <literal>up</literal> feature) when unlocking the account.
473 Defaults to <literal>yes</literal>. (Note: this setting is without effect if the security token does not support
474 the <literal>up</literal> feature at all, or does not allow enabling or disabling it.)
ec07c3c8
AK
475 </para>
476
477 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v249"/></listitem>
17e7561a
LP
478 </varlistentry>
479
480 <varlistentry>
481 <term><option>--fido2-with-user-verification=</option><replaceable>BOOL</replaceable></term>
482
483 <listitem><para>When enrolling a FIDO2 security token, controls whether to require user verification
484 when unlocking the account (the FIDO2 <literal>uv</literal> feature). Defaults to
485 <literal>no</literal>. (Note: this setting is without effect if the security token does not support
ec07c3c8
AK
486 the <literal>uv</literal> feature at all, or does not allow enabling or disabling it.)</para>
487
488 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v249"/></listitem>
17e7561a
LP
489 </varlistentry>
490
05c8e12c
LP
491 <varlistentry>
492 <term><option>--recovery-key=</option><replaceable>BOOL</replaceable></term>
493
494 <listitem><para>Accepts a boolean argument. If enabled a recovery key is configured for the
495 account. A recovery key is a computer generated access key that may be used to regain access to an
496 account if the password has been forgotten or the authentication token lost. The key is generated and
497 shown on screen, and should be printed or otherwise transferred to a secure location. A recovery key
ec07c3c8
AK
498 may be entered instead of a regular password to unlock the account.</para>
499
500 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v247"/></listitem>
05c8e12c
LP
501 </varlistentry>
502
ea7a19e9
LP
503 <varlistentry>
504 <term><option>--locked=</option><replaceable>BOOLEAN</replaceable></term>
505
506 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. Specifies whether this user account shall be locked. If
507 true logins into this account are prohibited, if false (the default) they are permitted (of course,
ec07c3c8
AK
508 only if authorization otherwise succeeds).</para>
509
510 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
511 </varlistentry>
512
513 <varlistentry>
514 <term><option>--not-before=</option><replaceable>TIMESTAMP</replaceable></term>
515 <term><option>--not-after=</option><replaceable>TIMESTAMP</replaceable></term>
516
517 <listitem><para>These options take a timestamp string, in the format documented in
518 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.time</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry> and
519 configures points in time before and after logins into this account are not
ec07c3c8
AK
520 permitted.</para>
521
522 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
523 </varlistentry>
524
525 <varlistentry>
526 <term><option>--rate-limit-interval=</option><replaceable>SECS</replaceable></term>
527 <term><option>--rate-limit-burst=</option><replaceable>NUMBER</replaceable></term>
528
529 <listitem><para>Configures a rate limit on authentication attempts for this user. If the user
530 attempts to authenticate more often than the specified number, on a specific system, within the
531 specified time interval authentication is refused until the time interval passes. Defaults to 10
ec07c3c8
AK
532 times per 1min.</para>
533
534 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
535 </varlistentry>
536
537 <varlistentry>
538 <term><option>--password-hint=</option><replaceable>TEXT</replaceable></term>
539
540 <listitem><para>Takes a password hint to store alongside the user record. This string is stored
541 accessible only to privileged users and the user itself and may not be queried by other users.
ec07c3c8
AK
542 Example: <option>--password-hint="My first pet's name"</option>.</para>
543
544 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
545 </varlistentry>
546
547 <varlistentry>
548 <term><option>--enforce-password-policy=</option><replaceable>BOOL</replaceable></term>
549 <term><option>-P</option></term>
550
551 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. Configures whether to enforce the system's password policy
552 for this user, regarding quality and strength of selected passwords. Defaults to
553 on. <option>-P</option> is short for
ec07c3c8
AK
554 <option>---enforce-password-policy=no</option>.</para>
555
556 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
557 </varlistentry>
558
559 <varlistentry>
560 <term><option>--password-change-now=</option><replaceable>BOOL</replaceable></term>
561
562 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. If true the user is asked to change their password on next
ec07c3c8
AK
563 login.</para>
564
565 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
566 </varlistentry>
567
568 <varlistentry>
569 <term><option>--password-change-min=</option><replaceable>TIME</replaceable></term>
570 <term><option>--password-change-max=</option><replaceable>TIME</replaceable></term>
571 <term><option>--password-change-warn=</option><replaceable>TIME</replaceable></term>
572 <term><option>--password-change-inactive=</option><replaceable>TIME</replaceable></term>
573
574 <listitem><para>Each of these options takes a time span specification as argument (in the syntax
575 documented in
675fa6ea 576 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.time</refentrytitle><manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>) and
e9dd6984 577 configures various aspects of the user's password expiration policy. Specifically,
ea7a19e9
LP
578 <option>--password-change-min=</option> configures how much time has to pass after changing the
579 password of the user until the password may be changed again. If the user tries to change their
580 password before this time passes the attempt is refused. <option>--password-change-max=</option>
e9dd6984
ZJS
581 configures how soon after it has been changed the password expires and needs to be changed again.
582 After this time passes logging in may only proceed after the password is changed.
583 <option>--password-change-warn=</option> specifies how much earlier than then the time configured
584 with <option>--password-change-max=</option> the user is warned at login to change their password as
585 it will expire soon. Finally <option>--password-change-inactive=</option> configures the time which
586 has to pass after the password as expired until the user is not permitted to log in or change the
587 password anymore. Note that these options only apply to password authentication, and do not apply to
588 other forms of authentication, for example PKCS#11-based security token
ec07c3c8
AK
589 authentication.</para>
590
591 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
592 </varlistentry>
593
594 <varlistentry>
595 <term><option>--disk-size=</option><replaceable>BYTES</replaceable></term>
596 <listitem><para>Either takes a size in bytes as argument (possibly using the usual K, M, G, …
078dfb06
LP
597 suffixes for 1024 base values), a percentage value, or the special strings <literal>min</literal> or
598 <literal>max</literal>, and configures the disk space to assign to the user. If a percentage value is
599 specified (i.e. the argument suffixed with <literal>%</literal>) it is taken relative to the
600 available disk space of the backing file system. If specified as <literal>min</literal> assigns the
601 minimal disk space permitted by the constraints of the backing file system and other limits, when
602 specified as <literal>max</literal> assigns the maximum disk space available. If the LUKS2 backend is
603 used this configures the size of the loopback file and file system contained therein. For the other
ea7a19e9
LP
604 storage backends configures disk quota using the filesystem's native quota logic, if available. If
605 not specified, defaults to 85% of the available disk space for the LUKS2 backend and to no quota for
ec07c3c8
AK
606 the others.</para>
607
608 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
609 </varlistentry>
610
611 <varlistentry>
612 <term><option>--access-mode=</option><replaceable>MODE</replaceable></term>
613
614 <listitem><para>Takes a UNIX file access mode written in octal. Configures the access mode of the
615 home directory itself. Note that this is only used when the directory is first created, and the user
616 may change this any time afterwards. Example:
ec07c3c8
AK
617 <option>--access-mode=0700</option></para>
618
619 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
620 </varlistentry>
621
622 <varlistentry>
623 <term><option>--umask=</option><replaceable>MASK</replaceable></term>
624
625 <listitem><para>Takes the access mode mask (in octal syntax) to apply to newly created files and
626 directories of the user ("umask"). If set this controls the initial umask set for all login sessions of
ec07c3c8
AK
627 the user, possibly overriding the system's defaults.</para>
628
629 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
630 </varlistentry>
631
632 <varlistentry>
633 <term><option>--nice=</option><replaceable>NICE</replaceable></term>
634
635 <listitem><para>Takes the numeric scheduling priority ("nice level") to apply to the processes of the user at login
ec07c3c8
AK
636 time. Takes a numeric value in the range -20 (highest priority) to 19 (lowest priority).</para>
637
638 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
639 </varlistentry>
640
641 <varlistentry>
642 <term><option>--rlimit=</option><replaceable>LIMIT</replaceable>=<replaceable>VALUE</replaceable><optional>:<replaceable>VALUE</replaceable></optional></term>
643
644 <listitem><para>Allows configuration of resource limits for processes of this user, see <citerefentry
645 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>getrlimit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>
646 for details. Takes a resource limit name (e.g. <literal>LIMIT_NOFILE</literal>) followed by an equal
647 sign, followed by a numeric limit. Optionally, separated by colon a second numeric limit may be
648 specified. If two are specified this refers to the soft and hard limits, respectively. If only one
ec07c3c8
AK
649 limit is specified the setting sets both limits in one.</para>
650
651 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
652 </varlistentry>
653
654 <varlistentry>
655 <term><option>--tasks-max=</option><replaceable>TASKS</replaceable></term>
656
84a1ff94 657 <listitem><para>Takes a non-zero unsigned integer as argument. Configures the maximum number of tasks
8dc647fd
ZJS
658 (i.e. threads, where each process is at least one thread) the user may have at any given time. This
659 limit applies to all tasks forked off the user's sessions, even if they change user identity via
660 <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>su</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>
661 or a similar tool. Use <option>--rlimit=LIMIT_NPROC=</option> to place a limit on the tasks actually
ea7a19e9 662 running under the UID of the user, thus excluding any child processes that might have changed user
86b52a39 663 identity. This controls the <varname>TasksMax=</varname> setting of the per-user systemd slice unit
ea7a19e9
LP
664 <filename>user-$UID.slice</filename>. See
665 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.resource-control</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
ec07c3c8
AK
666 for further details.</para>
667
668 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
669 </varlistentry>
670
671 <varlistentry>
672 <term><option>--memory-high=</option><replaceable>BYTES</replaceable></term>
673 <term><option>--memory-max=</option><replaceable>BYTES</replaceable></term>
674
675 <listitem><para>Set a limit on the memory a user may take up on a system at any given time in bytes
676 (the usual K, M, G, … suffixes are supported, to the base of 1024). This includes all memory used by
677 the user itself and all processes they forked off that changed user credentials. This controls the
678 <varname>MemoryHigh=</varname> and <varname>MemoryMax=</varname> settings of the per-user systemd
679 slice unit <filename>user-$UID.slice</filename>. See
680 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.resource-control</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
ec07c3c8
AK
681 for further details.</para>
682
683 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
684 </varlistentry>
685
686 <varlistentry>
687 <term><option>--cpu-weight=</option><replaceable>WEIGHT</replaceable></term>
688 <term><option>--io-weight=</option><replaceable>WEIGHT</replaceable></term>
689
24c8d4d3 690 <listitem><para>Set CPU and IO scheduling weights of the processes of the user, including those of
ea7a19e9
LP
691 processes forked off by the user that changed user credentials. Takes a numeric value in the range
692 1…10000. This controls the <varname>CPUWeight=</varname> and <varname>IOWeight=</varname> settings of
693 the per-user systemd slice unit <filename>user-$UID.slice</filename>. See
694 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.resource-control</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
ec07c3c8
AK
695 for further details.</para>
696
697 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
698 </varlistentry>
699
700 <varlistentry>
701 <term><option>--storage=</option><replaceable>STORAGE</replaceable></term>
702
703 <listitem><para>Selects the storage mechanism to use for this home directory. Takes one of
704 <literal>luks</literal>, <literal>fscrypt</literal>, <literal>directory</literal>,
705 <literal>subvolume</literal>, <literal>cifs</literal>. For details about these mechanisms, see
feb86ca9
LP
706 above. If a new home directory is created and the storage type is not specifically specified,
707 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>homed.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
ec07c3c8
AK
708 defines which default storage to use.</para>
709
710 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
711 </varlistentry>
712
713 <varlistentry>
714 <term><option>--image-path=</option><replaceable>PATH</replaceable></term>
715
716 <listitem><para>Takes a file system path. Configures where to place the user's home directory. When
717 LUKS2 storage is used refers to the path to the loopback file, otherwise to the path to the home
f9d525ae
LP
718 directory (which may be in <filename>/home/</filename> or any other accessible filesystem). When
719 unspecified defaults to <filename>/home/$USER.home</filename> when LUKS storage is used and
720 <filename>/home/$USER.homedir</filename> for the other storage mechanisms. Not defined for the
721 <literal>cifs</literal> storage mechanism. To use LUKS2 storage on a regular block device (for
722 example a USB stick) pass the path to the block device here. Specifying the path to a directory here
723 when using LUKS2 storage is not allowed. Similar, specifying the path to a regular file or device
ec07c3c8
AK
724 node is not allowed if any of the other storage backends are used.</para>
725
726 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
727 </varlistentry>
728
86019efa
LP
729 <varlistentry>
730 <term><option>--drop-caches=</option><replaceable>BOOL</replaceable></term>
731
732 <listitem><para>Automatically flush OS file system caches on logout. This is useful in combination
733 with the fscrypt storage backend to ensure the OS does not keep decrypted versions of the files and
734 directories in memory (and accessible) after logout. This option is also supported on other backends,
735 but should not bring any benefit there. Defaults to off, except if the selected storage backend is
736 fscrypt, where it defaults to on. Note that flushing OS caches will negatively influence performance
ec07c3c8
AK
737 of the OS shortly after logout.</para>
738
739 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v250"/></listitem>
86019efa
LP
740 </varlistentry>
741
ea7a19e9
LP
742 <varlistentry>
743 <term><option>--fs-type=</option><replaceable>TYPE</replaceable></term>
744
745 <listitem><para>When LUKS2 storage is used configures the file system type to use inside the home
caf6bd16
LP
746 directory LUKS2 container. One of <literal>btrfs</literal>, <literal>ext4</literal>,
747 <literal>xfs</literal>. If not specified
feb86ca9
LP
748 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>homed.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>
749 defines which default file system type to use. Note that <literal>xfs</literal> is not recommended as
ec07c3c8
AK
750 its support for file system resizing is too limited.</para>
751
752 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
753 </varlistentry>
754
755 <varlistentry>
756 <term><option>--luks-discard=</option><replaceable>BOOL</replaceable></term>
757
758 <listitem><para>When LUKS2 storage is used configures whether to enable the
759 <literal>discard</literal> feature of the file system. If enabled the file system on top of the LUKS2
760 volume will report empty block information to LUKS2 and the loopback file below, ensuring that empty
761 space in the home directory is returned to the backing file system below the LUKS2 volume, resulting
762 in a "sparse" loopback file. This option mostly defaults to off, since this permits over-committing
763 home directories which results in I/O errors if the underlying file system runs full while the upper
764 file system wants to allocate a block. Such I/O errors are generally not handled well by file systems
765 nor applications. When LUKS2 storage is used on top of regular block devices (instead of on top a
ec07c3c8
AK
766 loopback file) the discard logic defaults to on.</para>
767
768 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
769 </varlistentry>
770
c0440512
LP
771 <varlistentry>
772 <term><option>--luks-offline-discard=</option><replaceable>BOOL</replaceable></term>
773
774 <listitem><para>Similar to <option>--luks-discard=</option>, controls the trimming of the file
775 system. However, while <option>--luks-discard=</option> controls what happens when the home directory
776 is active, <option>--luks-offline-discard=</option> controls what happens when it becomes inactive,
777 i.e. whether to trim/allocate the storage when deactivating the home directory. This option defaults
ec07c3c8
AK
778 to on, to ensure disk space is minimized while a user is not logged in.</para>
779
780 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v246"/></listitem>
5dd57a00
LP
781 </varlistentry>
782
783 <varlistentry>
784 <term><option>--luks-extra-mount-options=</option><replaceable>OPTIONS</replaceable></term>
785
786 <listitem><para>Takes a string containing additional mount options to use when mounting the LUKS
787 volume. If specified, this string will be appended to the default, built-in mount
ec07c3c8
AK
788 options.</para>
789
790 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v250"/></listitem>
c0440512
LP
791 </varlistentry>
792
ea7a19e9
LP
793 <varlistentry>
794 <term><option>--luks-cipher=</option><replaceable>CIPHER</replaceable></term>
795 <term><option>--luks-cipher-mode=</option><replaceable>MODE</replaceable></term>
b72308d3 796 <term><option>--luks-volume-key-size=</option><replaceable>BYTES</replaceable></term>
ea7a19e9
LP
797 <term><option>--luks-pbkdf-type=</option><replaceable>TYPE</replaceable></term>
798 <term><option>--luks-pbkdf-hash-algorithm=</option><replaceable>ALGORITHM</replaceable></term>
b04ff66b 799 <term><option>--luks-pbkdf-force-iterations=</option><replaceable>ITERATIONS</replaceable></term>
ea7a19e9
LP
800 <term><option>--luks-pbkdf-time-cost=</option><replaceable>SECONDS</replaceable></term>
801 <term><option>--luks-pbkdf-memory-cost=</option><replaceable>BYTES</replaceable></term>
802 <term><option>--luks-pbkdf-parallel-threads=</option><replaceable>THREADS</replaceable></term>
fd83c98e 803 <term><option>--luks-sector-size=</option><replaceable>BYTES</replaceable></term>
ea7a19e9
LP
804
805 <listitem><para>Configures various cryptographic parameters for the LUKS2 storage mechanism. See
806 <citerefentry
807 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>cryptsetup</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>
b72308d3
ZJS
808 for details on the specific attributes.</para>
809
810 <para>Note that <command>homectl</command> uses bytes for key size, like
811 <filename>/proc/crypto</filename>, but <citerefentry
812 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>cryptsetup</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>
aefdc112
AK
813 uses bits.</para>
814
815 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
816 </varlistentry>
817
2f09e2ee
LP
818 <varlistentry>
819 <term><option>--auto-resize-mode=</option></term>
820
821 <listitem><para>Configures whether to automatically grow and/or shrink the backing file system on
822 login and logout. Takes one of the strings <literal>off</literal>, <literal>grow</literal>,
823 <literal>shrink-and-grow</literal>. Only applies to the LUKS2 backend currently, and if the btrfs
824 file system is used inside it (since only then online growing/shrinking of the file system is
825 supported). Defaults to <literal>shrink-and-grow</literal>, if LUKS2/btrfs is used, otherwise is
826 off. If set to <literal>off</literal> no automatic shrinking/growing during login or logout is
827 done. If set to <literal>grow</literal> the home area is grown to the size configured via
828 <option>--disk-size=</option> should it currently be smaller. If it already matches the configured
829 size or is larger no operation is executed. If set to <literal>shrink-and-grow</literal> the home
fe003f02
ZJS
830 area is also resized during logout to the minimal size the used disk space and file system
831 constraints permit. This mode thus ensures that while a home area is activated it is sized to the
832 configured size, but while deactivated it is compacted taking up only the minimal space possible.
833 Note that if the system is powered off abnormally or if the user otherwise not logged out cleanly the
834 shrinking operation will not take place, and the user has to re-login/logout again before it is
ec07c3c8
AK
835 executed again.</para>
836
837 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v250"/></listitem>
2f09e2ee
LP
838 </varlistentry>
839
21505c93
LP
840 <varlistentry>
841 <term><option>--rebalance-weight=</option></term>
842
843 <listitem><para>Configures the weight parameter for the free disk space rebalancing logic. Only
844 applies to the LUKS2 backend (since for the LUKS2 backend disk space is allocated from a per-user
845 loopback file system instead of immediately from a common pool like the other backends do it). In
846 regular intervals free disk space in the active home areas and their backing storage is redistributed
847 among them, taking the weight value configured here into account. Expects an integer in the range
848 1…10000, or the special string <literal>off</literal>. If not specified defaults to 100. The weight
849 is used to scale free space made available to the home areas: a home area with a weight of 200 will
850 get twice the free space as one with a weight of 100; a home area with a weight of 50 will get half
851 of that. The backing file system will be assigned space for a weight of 20. If set to
852 <literal>off</literal> no automatic free space distribution is done for this home area. Note that
853 resizing the home area explicitly (with <command>homectl resize</command> see below) will implicitly
854 turn off the automatic rebalancing. To reenable the automatic rebalancing use
ec07c3c8
AK
855 <option>--rebalance-weight=</option> with an empty parameter.</para>
856
857 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v250"/></listitem>
21505c93
LP
858 </varlistentry>
859
ea7a19e9
LP
860 <varlistentry>
861 <term><option>--nosuid=</option><replaceable>BOOL</replaceable></term>
862 <term><option>--nodev=</option><replaceable>BOOL</replaceable></term>
863 <term><option>--noexec=</option><replaceable>BOOL</replaceable></term>
864
865 <listitem><para>Configures the <literal>nosuid</literal>, <literal>nodev</literal> and
866 <literal>noexec</literal> mount options for the home directories. By default <literal>nodev</literal>
867 and <literal>nosuid</literal> are on, while <literal>noexec</literal> is off. For details about these
868 mount options see <citerefentry
ec07c3c8
AK
869 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>mount</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para>
870
871 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
872 </varlistentry>
873
874 <varlistentry>
875 <term><option>--cifs-domain=</option><replaceable>DOMAIN</replaceable></term>
876 <term><option>--cifs-user-name=</option><replaceable>USER</replaceable></term>
877 <term><option>--cifs-service=</option><replaceable>SERVICE</replaceable></term>
4c2ee5c7 878 <term><option>--cifs-extra-mount-options=</option><replaceable>OPTIONS</replaceable></term>
ea7a19e9
LP
879
880 <listitem><para>Configures the Windows File Sharing (CIFS) domain and user to associate with the home
bf15879b
LP
881 directory/user account, as well as the file share ("service") to mount as directory. The latter is
882 used when <literal>cifs</literal> storage is selected. The file share should be specified in format
883 <literal>//<replaceable>host</replaceable>/<replaceable>share</replaceable>/<replaceable>directory/…</replaceable></literal>. The
884 directory part is optional — if not specified the home directory will be placed in the top-level
4c2ee5c7
LP
885 directory of the share. The <option>--cifs-extra-mount-options=</option> setting allows specifying
886 additional mount options when mounting the share, see <citerefentry
887 project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>mount.cifs</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>
aefdc112
AK
888 for details.</para>
889
890 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
891 </varlistentry>
892
893 <varlistentry>
894 <term><option>--stop-delay=</option><replaceable>SECS</replaceable></term>
895
896 <listitem><para>Configures the time the per-user service manager shall continue to run after the all
897 sessions of the user ended. The default is configured in
898 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>logind.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> (for
899 home directories of LUKS2 storage located on removable media this defaults to 0 though). A longer
900 time makes sure quick, repetitive logins are more efficient as the user's service manager doesn't
ec07c3c8
AK
901 have to be started every time.</para>
902
903 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
904 </varlistentry>
905
906 <varlistentry>
907 <term><option>--kill-processes=</option><replaceable>BOOL</replaceable></term>
908
909 <listitem><para>Configures whether to kill all processes of the user on logout. The default is
910 configured in
ec07c3c8
AK
911 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>logind.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para>
912
913 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
914 </varlistentry>
915
916 <varlistentry>
917 <term><option>--auto-login=</option><replaceable>BOOL</replaceable></term>
918
919 <listitem><para>Takes a boolean argument. Configures whether the graphical UI of the system should
920 automatically log this user in if possible. Defaults to off. If less or more than one user is marked
ec07c3c8
AK
921 this way automatic login is disabled.</para>
922
923 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
924 </varlistentry>
925 </variablelist>
926 </refsect1>
927
928 <refsect1>
929 <title>Commands</title>
930
931 <para>The following commands are understood:</para>
932
933 <variablelist>
934
935 <varlistentry>
936 <term><command>list</command></term>
937
938 <listitem><para>List all home directories (along with brief details) currently managed by
939 <filename>systemd-homed.service</filename>. This command is also executed if none is specified on the
940 command line. (Note that the list of users shown by this command does not include users managed by
941 other subsystems, such as system users or any traditional users listed in
ec07c3c8
AK
942 <filename>/etc/passwd</filename>.)</para>
943
944 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
945 </varlistentry>
946
947 <varlistentry>
948 <term><command>activate</command> <replaceable>USER</replaceable> [<replaceable>USER…</replaceable>]</term>
949
950 <listitem><para>Activate one or more home directories. The home directories of each listed user will
951 be activated and made available under their mount points (typically in
952 <filename>/home/$USER</filename>). Note that any home activated this way stays active indefinitely,
953 until it is explicitly deactivated again (with <command>deactivate</command>, see below), or the user
954 logs in and out again and it thus is deactivated due to the automatic deactivation-on-logout
955 logic.</para>
956
957 <para>Activation of a home directory involves various operations that depend on the selected storage
958 mechanism. If the LUKS2 mechanism is used, this generally involves: inquiring the user for a
959 password, setting up a loopback device, validating and activating the LUKS2 volume, checking the file
e9dd6984 960 system, mounting the file system, and potentially changing the ownership of all included files to the
ec07c3c8
AK
961 correct UID/GID.</para>
962
963 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
964 </varlistentry>
965
966 <varlistentry>
967 <term><command>deactivate</command> <replaceable>USER</replaceable> [<replaceable>USER…</replaceable>]</term>
968
969 <listitem><para>Deactivate one or more home directories. This undoes the effect of
ec07c3c8
AK
970 <command>activate</command>.</para>
971
972 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
973 </varlistentry>
974
975 <varlistentry>
976 <term><command>inspect</command> <replaceable>USER</replaceable> [<replaceable>USER…</replaceable>]</term>
977
978 <listitem><para>Show various details about the specified home directories. This shows various
979 information about the home directory and its user account, including runtime data such as current
980 state, disk use and similar. Combine with <option>--json=</option> to show the detailed JSON user
981 record instead, possibly combined with <option>--export-format=</option> to suppress certain aspects
ec07c3c8
AK
982 of the output.</para>
983
984 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
985 </varlistentry>
986
987 <varlistentry>
988 <term><command>authenticate</command> <replaceable>USER</replaceable> [<replaceable>USER…</replaceable>]</term>
989
990 <listitem><para>Validate authentication credentials of a home directory. This queries the caller for
991 a password (or similar) and checks that it correctly unlocks the home directory. This leaves the home
992 directory in the state it is in, i.e. it leaves the home directory in inactive state if it was
ec07c3c8
AK
993 inactive before, and in active state if it was active before.</para>
994
995 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
996 </varlistentry>
997
998 <varlistentry>
999 <term><command>create</command> <replaceable>USER</replaceable></term>
1000 <term><command>create</command> <option>--identity=</option><replaceable>PATH</replaceable> <optional><replaceable>USER</replaceable></optional></term>
1001
1002 <listitem><para>Create a new home directory/user account of the specified name. Use the various
1003 user record property options (as documented above) to control various aspects of the home directory
887a8fa3
LP
1004 and its user accounts.</para>
1005
1006 <para>The specified user name should follow the strict syntax described on <ulink
ec07c3c8
AK
1007 url="https://systemd.io/USER_NAMES">User/Group Name Syntax</ulink>.</para>
1008
1009 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
1010 </varlistentry>
1011
1012 <varlistentry>
1013 <term><command>remove</command> <replaceable>USER</replaceable></term>
1014
1015 <listitem><para>Remove a home directory/user account. This will remove both the home directory's user
1016 record and the home directory itself, and thus delete all files and directories owned by the
ec07c3c8
AK
1017 user.</para>
1018
1019 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
1020 </varlistentry>
1021
1022 <varlistentry>
1023 <term><command>update</command> <replaceable>USER</replaceable></term>
1024 <term><command>update</command> <option>--identity=</option><replaceable>PATH</replaceable> <optional><replaceable>USER</replaceable></optional></term>
1025
1026 <listitem><para>Update a home directory/user account. Use the various user record property options
1027 (as documented above) to make changes to the account, or alternatively provide a full, updated JSON
1028 user record via the <option>--identity=</option> option.</para>
1029
1030 <para>Note that changes to user records not signed by a cryptographic private key available locally
1031 are not permitted, unless <option>--identity=</option> is used with a user record that is already
ec07c3c8
AK
1032 correctly signed by a recognized private key.</para>
1033
1034 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
1035 </varlistentry>
1036
1037 <varlistentry>
1038 <term><command>passwd</command> <replaceable>USER</replaceable></term>
1039
ec07c3c8
AK
1040 <listitem><para>Change the password of the specified home directory/user account.</para>
1041
1042 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
1043 </varlistentry>
1044
1045 <varlistentry>
1046 <term><command>resize</command> <replaceable>USER</replaceable> <replaceable>BYTES</replaceable></term>
1047
1048 <listitem><para>Change the disk space assigned to the specified home directory. If the LUKS2 storage
1049 mechanism is used this will automatically resize the loopback file and the file system contained
1050 within. Note that if <literal>ext4</literal> is used inside of the LUKS2 volume, it is necessary to
1051 deactivate the home directory before shrinking it (i.e the user has to log out). Growing can be done
1052 while the home directory is active. If <literal>xfs</literal> is used inside of the LUKS2 volume the
1053 home directory may not be shrunk whatsoever. On all three of <literal>ext4</literal>,
1054 <literal>xfs</literal> and <literal>btrfs</literal> the home directory may be grown while the user is
1055 logged in, and on the latter also shrunk while the user is logged in. If the
1056 <literal>subvolume</literal>, <literal>directory</literal>, <literal>fscrypt</literal> storage
9f5827e0
LP
1057 mechanisms are used, resizing will change file system quota. The size parameter may make use of the
1058 usual suffixes B, K, M, G, T (to the base of 1024). The special strings <literal>min</literal> and
1059 <literal>max</literal> may be specified in place of a numeric size value, for minimizing or
1060 maximizing disk space assigned to the home area, taking constraints of the file system, disk usage inside
ec07c3c8
AK
1061 the home area and on the backing storage into account.</para>
1062
1063 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
1064 </varlistentry>
1065
1066 <varlistentry>
1067 <term><command>lock</command> <replaceable>USER</replaceable></term>
1068
1069 <listitem><para>Temporarily suspend access to the user's home directory and remove any associated
1070 cryptographic keys from memory. Any attempts to access the user's home directory will stall until the
1071 home directory is unlocked again (i.e. re-authenticated). This functionality is primarily intended to
1072 be used during system suspend to make sure the user's data cannot be accessed until the user
1073 re-authenticates on resume. This operation is only defined for home directories that use the LUKS2
ec07c3c8
AK
1074 storage mechanism.</para>
1075
1076 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
1077 </varlistentry>
1078
1079 <varlistentry>
1080 <term><command>unlock</command> <replaceable>USER</replaceable></term>
1081
1082 <listitem><para>Resume access to the user's home directory again, undoing the effect of
1083 <command>lock</command> above. This requires authentication of the user, as the cryptographic keys
ec07c3c8
AK
1084 required for access to the home directory need to be reacquired.</para>
1085
1086 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
1087 </varlistentry>
1088
1089 <varlistentry>
1090 <term><command>lock-all</command></term>
1091
1092 <listitem><para>Execute the <command>lock</command> command on all suitable home directories at
1093 once. This operation is generally executed on system suspend (i.e. by <command>systemctl
1094 suspend</command> and related commands), to ensure all active user's cryptographic keys for accessing
ec07c3c8
AK
1095 their home directories are removed from memory.</para>
1096
1097 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9
LP
1098 </varlistentry>
1099
d1f6e01e
LP
1100 <varlistentry>
1101 <term><command>deactivate-all</command></term>
1102
1103 <listitem><para>Execute the <command>deactivate</command> command on all active home directories at
1104 once. This operation is generally executed on system shut down (i.e. by <command>systemctl
1105 poweroff</command> and related commands), to ensure all active user's home directories are fully
ec07c3c8
AK
1106 deactivated before <filename>/home/</filename> and related file systems are unmounted.</para>
1107
1108 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v247"/></listitem>
d1f6e01e
LP
1109 </varlistentry>
1110
ea7a19e9
LP
1111 <varlistentry>
1112 <term><command>with</command> <replaceable>USER</replaceable> <replaceable>COMMAND…</replaceable></term>
1113
1114 <listitem><para>Activate the specified user's home directory, run the specified command (under the
1115 caller's identity, not the specified user's) and deactivate the home directory afterwards again
1116 (unless the user is logged in otherwise). This command is useful for running privileged backup
1117 scripts and such, but requires authentication with the user's credentials in order to be able to
ec07c3c8
AK
1118 unlock the user's home directory.</para>
1119
1120 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v245"/></listitem>
ea7a19e9 1121 </varlistentry>
6d6d4459
LP
1122
1123 <varlistentry>
1124 <term><command>rebalance</command></term>
1125
1126 <listitem><para>Rebalance free disk space between active home areas and the backing storage. See
1127 <option>--rebalance-weight=</option> above. This executes no operation unless there's at least one
1128 active LUKS2 home area that has disk space rebalancing enabled. This operation is synchronous: it
1129 will only complete once disk space is rebalanced according to the rebalancing weights. Note that
1130 rebalancing also takes place automatically in the background in regular intervals. Use this command
1131 to synchronously ensure disk space is properly redistributed before initiating an operation requiring
ec07c3c8
AK
1132 large amounts of disk space.</para>
1133
1134 <xi:include href="version-info.xml" xpointer="v250"/></listitem>
6d6d4459 1135 </varlistentry>
ea7a19e9
LP
1136 </variablelist>
1137 </refsect1>
1138
1139 <refsect1>
1140 <title>Exit status</title>
1141
1142 <para>On success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise.</para>
b9bfa250
ZJS
1143
1144 <para>When a command is invoked with <command>with</command>, the exit status of the child is
1145 propagated. Effectively, <command>homectl</command> will exit without error if the command is
1146 successfully invoked <emphasis>and</emphasis> finishes successfully.</para>
ea7a19e9
LP
1147 </refsect1>
1148
4ef3ca34 1149 <xi:include href="common-variables.xml" />
ea7a19e9
LP
1150
1151 <refsect1>
1152 <title>Examples</title>
1153
1154 <example>
1155 <title>Create a user <literal>waldo</literal> in the administrator group <literal>wheel</literal>, and
1156 assign 500 MiB disk space to them.</title>
1157
1158 <programlisting>homectl create waldo --real-name="Waldo McWaldo" -G wheel --disk-size=500M</programlisting>
1159 </example>
1160
1161 <example>
1162 <title>Create a user <literal>wally</literal> on a USB stick, and assign a maximum of 500 concurrent
1163 tasks to them.</title>
1164
1165 <programlisting>homectl create wally --real-name="Wally McWally" --image-path=/dev/disk/by-id/usb-SanDisk_Ultra_Fit_476fff954b2b5c44-0:0 --tasks-max=500</programlisting>
1166 </example>
1167
1168 <example>
1169 <title>Change nice level of user <literal>odlaw</literal> to +5 and make sure the environment variable
1170 <varname>$SOME</varname> is set to the string <literal>THING</literal> for them on login.</title>
1171
1172 <programlisting>homectl update odlaw --nice=5 --setenv=SOME=THING</programlisting>
1173 </example>
1174
1175 <example>
4442c269 1176 <title>Set up authentication with a YubiKey security token using PKCS#11/PIV:</title>
ea7a19e9
LP
1177
1178 <programlisting># Clear the Yubikey from any old keys (careful!)
1179ykman piv reset
1180
1181# Generate a new private/public key pair on the device, store the public key in 'pubkey.pem'.
1182ykman piv generate-key -a RSA2048 9d pubkey.pem
1183
1184# Create a self-signed certificate from this public key, and store it on the device.
1185ykman piv generate-certificate --subject "Knobelei" 9d pubkey.pem
1186
4442c269 1187# We don't need the public key on disk anymore
ea7a19e9
LP
1188rm pubkey.pem
1189
4442c269
LP
1190# Allow the security token to unlock the account of user 'lafcadio'.
1191homectl update lafcadio --pkcs11-token-uri=auto</programlisting>
1192 </example>
1193
1194 <example>
1195 <title>Set up authentication with a FIDO2 security token:</title>
ea7a19e9 1196
4442c269
LP
1197 <programlisting># Allow a FIDO2 security token to unlock the account of user 'nihilbaxter'.
1198homectl update nihilbaxter --fido2-device=auto</programlisting>
ea7a19e9
LP
1199 </example>
1200 </refsect1>
1201
1202 <refsect1>
1203 <title>See Also</title>
1204 <para>
1205 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1206 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-homed.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
feb86ca9 1207 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>homed.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
ea7a19e9
LP
1208 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>userdbctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1209 <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>useradd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1210 <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>cryptsetup</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>
1211 </para>
1212 </refsect1>
1213
1214</refentry>