pwd — The password database
This module provides access to the Unix user account and password database. It is available on all Unix versions.
Password database entries are reported as a tuple-like object, whose attributes correspond to the members of the passwd structure (Attribute field below, see <pwd.h>):
Index  |  Attribute  |  Meaning  |  
|---|---|---|
0  |  
  |  Login name  |  
1  |  
  |  Optional encrypted password  |  
2  |  
  |  Numerical user ID  |  
3  |  
  |  Numerical group ID  |  
4  |  
  |  User name or comment field  |  
5  |  
  |  User home directory  |  
6  |  
  |  User command interpreter  |  
The uid and gid items are integers, all others are strings. KeyError is raised if the entry asked for cannot be found.
Note
In traditional Unix the field pw_passwd usually contains a password encrypted with a DES derived algorithm (see module crypt). However most modern unices use a so-called shadow password system. On those unices the pw_passwd field only contains an asterisk ('*') or the letter 'x' where the encrypted password is stored in a file /etc/shadow which is not world readable. Whether the pw_passwd field contains anything useful is system-dependent. If available, the spwd module should be used where access to the encrypted password is required.
It defines the following items:
- 
pwd.getpwuid(uid) - 
Return the password database entry for the given numeric user ID.
 
- 
pwd.getpwnam(name) - 
Return the password database entry for the given user name.
 
- 
pwd.getpwall() - 
Return a list of all available password database entries, in arbitrary order.
 
See also
    © 2001–2021 Python Software Foundation
Licensed under the PSF License.
    https://docs.python.org/3.10/library/pwd.html