$Source: /mit/kerberos/src/man/RCS/klist.1,v $
$Author: jtkohl $
$Header: klist.1,v 4.8 89/01/24 14:35:09 jtkohl Exp $
Copyright 1989 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
For copying and distribution information,
please see the file <mit-copyright.h>.
$Author: jtkohl $
$Header: klist.1,v 4.8 89/01/24 14:35:09 jtkohl Exp $
Copyright 1989 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
For copying and distribution information,
please see the file <mit-copyright.h>.
KLIST 1 "Kerberos Version 4.0" "MIT Project Athena"
NAME
klist - list currently held Kerberos tickets
SYNOPSIS
klist [
-s | -t
] [
-file name ] [
-srvtab ]
DESCRIPTION
klist prints the name of the tickets file and the
identity of the principal the tickets are for (as listed in the
tickets file), and
lists the principal names of all Kerberos tickets currently held by
the user, along with the issue and expire time for each authenticator.
Principal names are listed in the form
name.instance@realm, with the '.' omitted if the instance is null,
and the '@' omitted if the realm is null.
If given the
-s option,
klist does not print the issue and expire times, the name of the tickets file,
or the identity of the principal.
If given the
-t option,
klist checks for the existence of a non-expired ticket-granting-ticket in the
ticket file. If one is present, it exits with status 0, else it exits
with status 1. No output is generated when this option is specified.
If given the
-file option, the following argument is used as the ticket file.
Otherwise, if the
KRBTKFILE environment variable is set, it is used.
If this environment variable
is not set, the file
/tmp/tkt[uid] is used, where
uid is the current user-id of the user.
If given the
-srvtab option, the file is treated as a service key file, and the names of the
keys contained therein are printed. If no file is
specified with a
-file option, the default is
/etc/srvtab . FILES
2i /etc/krb.conf to get the name of the local realm
/tmp/tkt[uid] as the default ticket file ([uid] is the decimal UID of the user).
/etc/srvtab as the default service key file
SEE ALSO
kerberos(1), kinit(1), kdestroy(1)
BUGS
When reading a file as a service key file, very little sanity or error
checking is performed.