.TH CHFN 1 .UC .SH NAME chfn \- change finger entry .SH SYNOPSIS .B chfn [ loginname ] .SH DESCRIPTION .I Chfn is used to change information about users. This information is used by the finger program, among others. It consists of the user's "real life" name, office room number, office phone number, and home phone number. .I Chfn prompts the user for each field. Included in the prompt is a default value, which is enclosed between brackets. The default value is accepted simply by typing . To enter a blank field, type the word 'none'. Below is a sample run: .IP .B "Name [Biff Studsworth II]:" .br .B "Room number (Exs: 597E or 197C) []:" 521E .br .B "Office Phone (Ex: 1632) []:" 1863 .br .B "Home Phone (Ex: 987532) [5771546]:" none .sp .PP .I Chfn allows phone numbers to be entered with or without hyphens. Because .I finger only knows about UCB extensions, .I chfn will insist upon a four digit number (after the hyphens are removed) for office phone numbers. Also, room numbers must be in Evans or Cory; again, this is because of .IR finger . .PP It is a good idea to run finger after running .I chfn to make sure everything is the way you want it. .PP The optional argument .I loginname is used to change another person's finger information. This can only be done by the super-user. .SH FILES /etc/passwd, /etc/ptmp .SH SEE\ ALSO finger(1), passwd(5) .SH BUGS The encoding of the office and extension information is installation dependent. .PP For historical reasons, the user's name, etc are stored in the passwd file. This is a bad place to store the information. Rumors are that a data base is being developed to store this information, but don't hold your breath. .PP Because two users may try to write the passwd file at once, a synchronization method was developed. On rare occasions, a message that the password file is "busy" will be printed. In this case, .I chfn sleeps for a while and then tries to write to the passwd file again.