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Date:      Thu, 07 Feb 2002 19:34:24 +0100
From:      "Roger 'Rocky' Vetterberg" <listsub@rambo.simx.org>
To:        Marcus Collins <marcus@writeclick.co.za>
Cc:        Cliff Sarginson <cliff@raggedclown.net>, freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: toor?
Message-ID:  <3C62C8B0.2010102@rambo.simx.org>
References:  <001e01c1af94$a14e04f0$2300a8c0@zeus> <20020207091505.A1036@encephalon.de> <20020207172522.GA2088@raggedclown.net> <3C62B9EE.3020009@rambo.simx.org> <20020207182321.GA27040@davinci.writeclick.co.za>

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Marcus Collins wrote:

>On Thu,  7 Feb 2002 at 18:31:26 +0100, Roger 'Rocky' Vetterberg wrote:
>
>>Could someone explain why you cant just chsh or vipw roots shell to 
>>bash, sh or whatever?
>>I cant see any good reason to have two root accounts just because you 
>>dont like the default root shell.
>>
>
>The default root account uses csh as its shell. This is located in /bin,
>which is (usually) in the / filesystem.
>
>You can set toor to use whatever shell you want, for example,
>/usr/local/bin/bash, and use that in day-to-day superuser operations. 
>
>If your /usr filesystem gets hosed, you can still login as root
>(= /bin/csh), assuming your / filesystem can still be mounted. This,
>AFAIK, is the theory behind having two UID 0 users, rather than just
>one with whichever shell you select.
>
>The "root" user is just a traditional name for UID 0. Any user with UID
>0 has superuser privileges.
>
>Cheers!
>
>-- Marcus
>
If root has a shell residing under /usr, and /usr for some reason is not 
mounted at boot, it will prompt you somehing like "Enter full pathname 
of shell or press enter for /bin/sh".
So this can not be the only reason there are two root accounts.

--
R


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