Lines Matching refs:on
10 The precise set of allowed user and group names on Linux systems is weakly
11 defined. Depending on the distribution a different set of requirements and
12 restrictions on the syntax of user/group names are enforced — on some
61 focus on Linux systems only however, hence those are out of scope. That said,
62 software like Samba is frequently deployed on Linux for providing compatibility
63 with Windows systems; on such systems it might be wise to stick to user/group
68 Distilled from the above, below are the rules systemd enforces on user/group
88 (typically 256 on Linux; rationale: this is how POSIX suggests to detect the
89 limit), `UT_NAMESIZE-1` (typically 31 on Linux; rationale: names longer than
91 accounting) and `NAME_MAX` (255 on Linux; rationale: user names typically
132 tend to have special meaning when output on a terminal in other contexts,
147 parsing errors, and creates confusion since not visible on screen)
167 valid in all systemd contexts and on all Linux systems should match the