Hello,
Since I do not want to update '/etc/passwd' each time the SID changes (sysprep
deployment for example), I wanted to know if I can modify my /etc/passwd like this:
Administrator:unused_by_nt/2000/xp:544:544:U-Administrator,S-1-5-32-544:/home/Administrator:/bin/bash
Or assign any other
On Dec 2 12:50, Ludovic Drolez wrote:
Hello,
Since I do not want to update '/etc/passwd' each time the SID changes
(sysprep deployment for example), I wanted to know if I can modify my
/etc/passwd like this:
Corinna Vinschen wrote:
On Dec 2 12:50, Ludovic Drolez wrote:
Hello,
Since I do not want to update '/etc/passwd' each time the SID changes
(sysprep deployment for example), I wanted to know if I can modify my
/etc/passwd like this:
On Dec 2 14:58, Ludovic Drolez wrote:
Corinna Vinschen wrote:
You can hurt your /etc/passwd as you like as long as it works. It
won't affect native Windows apps usually, unless you make some bad
So having the same SID for the user and unix group won't make cygwin (and
windows) go crazy ?
On Fri, 2 Dec 2005, Ludovic Drolez wrote:
Corinna Vinschen wrote:
On Dec 2 12:50, Ludovic Drolez wrote:
Hello,
Since I do not want to update '/etc/passwd' each time the SID changes
(sysprep deployment for example), I wanted to know if I can modify my
/etc/passwd like this:
On Dec 2 10:25, Igor Pechtchanski wrote:
On Fri, 2 Dec 2005, Ludovic Drolez wrote:
Corinna Vinschen wrote:
On Dec 2 12:50, Ludovic Drolez wrote:
Hello,
Since I do not want to update '/etc/passwd' each time the SID changes
(sysprep deployment for example), I wanted to
On Fri, 2 Dec 2005, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
On Dec 2 10:25, Igor Pechtchanski wrote:
On Fri, 2 Dec 2005, Ludovic Drolez wrote:
So having the same SID for the user and unix group won't make cygwin
(and windows) go crazy ?
AFAIK, Windows groups are actually compound users.
Huh?!?
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