The following information reproduces the information from UNIX man page for the KDESTROY command. |
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kdestroy | [-A] [-q] [-c cache_name] |
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The kdestroy utility destroys the user's active Kerberos authorization tickets by writing zeros to the specified credentials cache that contains them. If the credentials cache is not specified, the default credentials cache is destroyed.
-A | Destroys all caches in the collection, if a cache collection is available. |
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-q | Run quietly. Normally kdestroy beeps if it fails to destroy the user's tickets. The -q flag suppresses this behavior. |
-c cache_name | Use cache_name as the credentials (ticket) cache name and location; if this option is not used, the default cache name and location are used. The default credentials cache may vary between systems. If the KRB5CCNAME environment variable is set, its value is used to name the default ticket cache. |
Most installations recommend that you place the kdestroy command in your .logout file, so that your tickets are destroyed automatically when you log out.
Kdestroy uses the following environment variables:
KRB5CCNAME | Location of the default Kerberos 5 credentials (ticket) cache, in the form type:residual. If no type prefix is present, the FILE type is assumed. The type of the default cache may determine the availability of a cache collection; for instance, a default cache of type DIR causes caches within the directory to be present in the collection. |
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/tmp/krb5cc_[uid] | default location of Kerberos 5 credentials cache ([uid] is the decimal UID of the user). |
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Only the tickets in the specified credentials cache are destroyed. Separate ticket caches are used to hold root instance and password changing tickets. These should probably be destroyed too, or all of a user's tickets kept in a single credentials cache.