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Date:      Tue, 23 Oct 2007 02:38:30 +0100
From:      John Murphy <freebsd001@freeode.co.uk>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Can login using root password, but not remotely with SSH
Message-ID:  <20071023023830.6cf11d47@turion.freeode.co.uk>
In-Reply-To: <18204.64615.764929.781460@jerusalem.litteratus.org>
References:  <20071022074758.5131513C4A5@mx1.freebsd.org> <1193065278.73574.42.camel@secretariat.lanl.gov> <18204.64615.764929.781460@jerusalem.litteratus.org>

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On Mon, 22 Oct 2007 15:39:19 -0400
Robert Huff <roberthuff@rcn.com> wrote:

>=20
> James writes:
>=20
> >  Add yourself to wheel (which is the root group on FreeBSD, a name
> >  I believe it inherited from earlier BSDs, but I've no idea what
> >  the justification for choosing 'wheel' is; any BSD historians
> >  here - you'd be welcome to let us know!)
>=20
> 	Not sure, but I believe "wheel" predates UNIX.  I have
> certainly seen the idea on OSes that do.

Interesting. Google found this:

=46rom "The New Hacker's Dictionary version 4.2.2" by Various editors

wheel n.

[from slang `big wheel' for a powerful person] A person who has an
active wheel bit. "We need to find a wheel to unwedge the hung tape
drives." The traditional name of security group zero in BSD (to which
the major system-internal users like root belong) is `wheel'. Some
vendors have expanded on this usage, modifying Unix so that only
members of group `wheel' can go root.

--=20
Thanks, John.




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