chsh
Samuel Martín Moro
CamTrace
{EPITECH.} tek4
Nobody wants to say how this works.
Maybe nobody knows ...
Xorg.conf(5)
On Fri, Feb 26, 2010 at 5:41 AM, mikel king mikel.k...@olivent.com wrote:
On Feb 25, 2010, at 9:57 PM, Roger Campbell wrote:
Lowell Gilbert, I
Lowell Gilbert, I would like to thank you for your posting about changing the
default shell. I was running in circles until I found your post suggestion vipw.
Roger
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
On Feb 25, 2010, at 9:57 PM, Roger Campbell wrote:
Lowell Gilbert, I would like to thank you for your posting about
changing the default shell. I was running in circles until I found
your post suggestion vipw.
Roger
Roger,
You can also use pw.
pw usermod
I'm running freeBSD 6 release (FreeBSD taurus.cruz 6.0-RELEASE FreeBSD
6.0-RELEASE #0: Mon Jan 2 01:42:42 EST 2006
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/FILESERV i386) and for whatever
reason, i'm stuck in bourne. Sure, I can type bash and open a new
shell that way, but it will not let
John Cruz [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'm running freeBSD 6 release (FreeBSD taurus.cruz 6.0-RELEASE FreeBSD
6.0-RELEASE #0: Mon Jan 2 01:42:42 EST 2006
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/FILESERV i386) and for
whatever reason, i'm stuck in bourne. Sure, I can type bash and open
a new
Lowell Gilbert wrote:
Something is wrong with the entry already in the password file.
Use vipw to (a) look at it, (b) fix it, and (c) rebuild the database.
Thanks, that did it! I tried manually editing /etc/passwd before and I
guess there's other ways that have to be done to change it.
John Cruz wrote:
Lowell Gilbert wrote:
Something is wrong with the entry already in the password file.
Use vipw to (a) look at it, (b) fix it, and (c) rebuild the database.
Thanks, that did it! I tried manually editing /etc/passwd before and I
guess there's other ways that have to be