NAME
hosts.equiv,
    .rhosts —
    trusted remote host and user name data
    base
DESCRIPTION
Thehosts.equiv and .rhosts
  files contain information regarding trusted hosts and users on the network.
  For each host a single line should be present with the following information:
simple
hostname [username]
or the more verbose
[+-][hostname|@netgroup] [[+-][username|@netgroup]]
A “@” indicates a host by netgroup or user by netgroup. A single “+” matches all hosts or users. A host name with a leading “-” will reject all matching hosts and all their users. A user name with leading “-” will reject all matching users from matching hosts.
Items are separated by any number of blanks and/or tab characters. A “#” indicates the beginning of a comment; characters up to the end of the line are not interpreted by routines which search the file.
Host names are specified in the conventional Internet DNS dotted-domains “.” (dot) notation using the inet_addr(3) routine from the Internet address manipulation library, inet(3). Host names may contain any printable character other than a field delimiter, newline, or comment character.
For security reasons, a user's .rhosts
    file will be ignored if it is not a regular file, or if it is not owned by
    the user, or if it is writable by anyone other than the user.
FILES
- /etc/hosts.equiv
- The hosts.equivfile resides in /etc.
- $HOME/.rhosts
- .rhostsfile resides in $HOME.
EXAMPLES
bar.com fooTrust user “foo” from host “bar.com”.
+@allclientTrust all hosts from netgroup “allclient”.
+@allclient -@dauTrust all hosts from netgroup “allclient” and their users except users from netgroup “dau”.
SEE ALSO
rcp(1), rlogin(1), rsh(1), gethostbyname(3), inet(3), innetgr(3), ruserok(3), netgroup(5), ifconfig(8), yp(8)
BUGS
This manual page is incomplete. For more information read the source in src/lib/libc/net/rcmd.c or the SunOS manual page.