Christian PERRIER a écrit :
Reassigning to the right D-I component.However, in user-setup-apply: if [ -e $ROOT/etc/sudoers ]; then # Test if we can add the user to the sudo group # (possible if sudo>= 1.7.2-2 is installed on the target system) # If we can, do it this way, otherwise add the user to sudoers # See #597239 if ! $log $chroot $ROOT adduser "$USER" sudo>/dev/null 2>&1; then echo "$USER ALL=(ALL) ALL">> $ROOT/etc/sudoers fi else # sudo failed to install, system won't be usable exit 1 fi In short, according to this code, this is already implemented, as of user-setup 1.34, assuming the sudo group exists at the time this is done. Adding the sudo user to sudoers is only a fallback.
I just installed a fresh wheezy system without a root account and the first user is indeed in the sudo group. And network-manager does not ask for the root password to setup a wireless connection. So I'd say that there's no bug after all...
-- Denis Laxalde -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [email protected] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [email protected] Archive: http://lists.debian.org/[email protected]

