Another way around this is to create a group quota for a particular group (like, say, users), and make everyone a member of that group. Then, if you want to assign a specific user their own quota, you can do that, later. On Mon, 31 May 2004, Alexey Fadyushin wrote: > I think that option '-p' of 'edquota' will be useful in this case. You > could > manually set quota for some user and later use that option to copy quota > settings from that user to newly created user. > If you need to do this automatically for each new user, you could write > a > shell script for creating users and use it instead of `useradd`. The > 'useradd' > and 'edquota' command in this case will be called from that script. > > Alexey Fadyushin > Brainbench MVP for Linux. > http://www.brainbench.com > > Ryan Golhar wrote: > > > > Is there a way to automatically set a user quota without running > > edquota? For example, whenever a new user gets added to the system, I > > don't want to have to manually set their quota. I want to use a > > standard quota for all users. > > > > Ryan > > > > -- > > redhat-list mailing list > > unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe > > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list > > > -- Mike Burger http://www.bubbanfriends.org Visit the Dog Pound II BBS telnet://dogpound2.citadel.org or http://dogpound2.citadel.org:2000 To be notified of updates to the web site, visit http://www.bubbanfriends.org/mailman/listinfo/site-update, or send a message to: site-update-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx with a message of: subscribe -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list