On Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 8:26 AM, Rob McBroom <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> On 2009-Apr-29, at 10:41 AM, Nigel Kersten wrote:
>
>> On Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 5:24 AM, Rob McBroom
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>> You can get an example for your particular system by running this as
>>> root:
>>>
>>> ralsh user username
>>
>> Note that to read an existing password hash, you'll probably need to
>> be root on most OSes. This is the case at least for OS X.
>
> I probably should have said to run the command "as root". Oh, wait… ;)
hah. I did actually read that, but I didn't express myself well.
I meant to point out explicitly that on OS X say, if you run this as
non-root, you'll get a user resource definition back, it just won't
contain the password.
ie
nigelk$ ralsh user testuser
user { 'testuser':
comment => 'testuser',
home => '/Users/testuser',
shell => '/bin/bash',
uid => '123',
gid => '123',
ensure => 'present'
}
nigelk$ sudo ralsh user testuser
user { 'testuser':
comment => 'testuser',
password => "..........",
home => '/Users/testuser',
shell => '/bin/bash',
uid => '123',
gid => '123',
ensure => 'present'
}
>
> --
> Rob McBroom
> <http://www.skurfer.com/>
>
>
> >
>
--
Nigel Kersten
[email protected]
System Administrator
Google, Inc.
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