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Commands Reference, Volume 4
nismatch Command
Purpose
Utility for searching NIS+ tables.
Syntax
nismatch [ -A ] [ -c ] [ -h ] [ -M ] [ -o ] [ -P ] [ -v ]
DESCRIPTION
The command nisgrep differs from the nismatch command in its ability to accept regular expressions for the
search criteria rather than simple text matches.
Because nisgrep uses a callback function, it is not
constrained to searching only those columns that are specifically made searchable
at the time of table creation. This makes it more flexible, but slower, than nismatch.
In nismatch, the server does the searching; wheareas
in nisgrep, the server returns all the readable entries
and then the client does the pattern-matching.
In both commands, the parameter tablename is the NIS+ name
of the table to be searched. If only one key or key pattern is specified
without the column name, then it is applied searching the first column. Specific
named columns can be searched by using the syntax.
When multiple columns are searched, only entries that match in all columns
are returned. This is the equivalent of a logical join operation. nismatch accepts an additional form of search criteria, which is a NIS+
indexed name of the form:
Flags
-A |
Return the data within the table and all of the data in tables in the
initial table's concatenation path. |
-c |
Print only a count of the number of entries that matched the search
criteria. |
-h |
Display a header line before the matching entries that contains the
names of the table's columns. |
-M |
Master server only. Send the lookup to the master server of the named
data. This guarantees that the most up to date information is seen at the
possible expense that the master server may be busy. |
-o |
Display the internal representation of the matching NIS+
object(s). |
-P |
Follow concatenation path. Specify that the lookup should follow the
concatenation path of a table if the initial search is unsuccessful. |
-v |
Do not suppress the output of binary data when displaying matching
entries. Without this option binary data is displayed as the string *\s-1BINARY\s0*
.
- 0 - Successfully matches some entries.
- 1 - Successfully searches the table and no matches
are found.
- 2 - An error condition occurs. An error message
is also printed.
|
Examples
- This example searches a table named passwd in the org_dir subdirectory of the zotz.com.domain. It returns the entry that has the username of skippy.
In this example,
all the work is done on the server.
nismatch\ name=skippy\ passwd.org_dir.zotz.com.
- This example is similar to the one above except that it uses nisgrep to find all users in the table named passwd that are using either ksh (1) or csh (1).
nisgrep\ 'shell=[ck]sh'\ passwd.org_dir.zotz.com.
- NIS_PATH - If this variable is set, and the NIS+ table name
is not fully qualified, each directory specified will be searched until the
table is found (see nisdefaults, niscat, nisls, and nistbladm).
Related Information
The nisgrep
command, nisdefaults command, niscat command, nisls command, and nistbladm command.
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