Managing SMB File Sharing and Windows Interoperability in Oracle Solaris 11.2

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Updated: July 2014
 
 

How to Remove a User or Group Mapping Rule

  1. Become an administrator.

    For more information, see Using Your Assigned Administrative Rights in Securing Users and Processes in Oracle Solaris 11.2 .

  2. Find the user or group mapping that you want to remove.
    # idmap list

    For example, to find all user mappings that map to the Oracle Solaris user pat, you would type:

    # idmap list | grep pat

    For example, to find all unidirectional group mappings that map to the Oracle Solaris group staff, type:

    # idmap list | grep staff
  3. Remove one or more mappings.
    • Remove one or more user mappings.
      • To remove any rule-based mapping that involves the specified user name, username:

        # idmap remove username
      • To remove rule-based mappings between username1 and username2:

        # idmap remove username1 username2
      • To remove all rule-based mappings:

        # idmap remove -a
    • Remove one or more group mappings.
      • To remove any rule-based mapping that involves the specified group name, group-name:

        # idmap remove group-name
      • To remove rule-based mappings between group-name1 and group-name2:

        # idmap remove group-name1 group-name2
      • To remove all rule-based mappings:

        # idmap remove -a