You did not put in a password when you sset up your first account? It asks for onee, so I put one in. I figured ignoring that field is a bad idea.

Jane


On Jul 4, 2006, at 5:42 PM, Holly Anderson wrote:

Hi. I did try typing su at the terminal prompt on my admin account, however it kept asking for a password. I haven't set a system-wide password to my knowledge, so not sure what's going on. Where would I look in sys preferences to make sure?
Holly
On Jul 4, 2006, at 12:46 PM, Travis Siegel wrote:

If flip for mac works for you, then it will play content regardless of it's stream/download status.
And, to answer your other question.
The root password by default is blank. You can become root simply by typing
su
at a terminal prompt. However, I *do* *not* recommend you leave it this way. In your system preferences, you can set a system wide password. This is the root password. If you have a systemwide password, then this is the password you would use to become root. You cannot login as root from the logon screen (beats me why, probably because of the no default password thing)
However, su will do the job for you.
Then you're root, and may do whatever you like, including changing ownership permissions on both user and group options on *any* file, you could also wipe out your entire hd if you type the wrong command, so do not use root without knowing what it is you're doing, it can be very detremental to the health of your machine. When you're in terminal, and you use the rm command, there is no move to the trash first, the files are simply gone. Now, with all that said, let me say that sometimes, becoming root is the only way to fix a problem w/o having to reinstall an app, or the whole os in some cases. It's an extremely useful tool, and one that can fix nearly anything if you know how to do the fix. Apple recomends the use of pseudo to perform such actions, and if you've only got one or two things to do, then this is definitely the way to go. However, pseudo can also be extremely irritating if permissions aren't assigned properly, which is why I usually prefer to just become root myself and do the work required then exit thhe root shell.
It's of course up to you.
And, in case I missed stating it,
if there is no system wide password set, simply typing su at a terminal will automatically make you root. This is why it's so dangerous. If someone who doesn't like you much gets into your terminal, and you don't have a password set, two simple letters can give them permission to wipe out your system with no recourse on your behalf.




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