I installed from the latest CD disk iso image, and skipped the online mirror image.
Would a netinstall give me automatically the missing driver?
Like, would it download the missing driver automatically during installation of debian?
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Guest account has sudo privileges w/o pwd, sudoers.d Warning
Re: Guest account has sudo privileges w/o pwd, sudoers.d War
I made a search on https://packages.debian.org/search?suit ... 1816d-1.fw for rtl_nic/rt1816d-1.fw with no results. So the PPA has to come from "non-free" sources... I guess I'll try to run debian 9 without this firmware. And hope the ethernet server will work. What do you think? Thank you.
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Re: Guest account has sudo privileges w/o pwd, sudoers.d War
If you want this fixed, it would help to follow advice and give information requested.
DO NOT use PPAs, they are for Ubuntu based distros like Mint.
You say your missing firmware is rtl_nic/rt1816d-1.fw . You sure it isn't rtl8168d-1? That is included in firmware-realtek from Debian non-free repo. I'm thinking your sources are still wrong if you can't install this. As requested before, post your whole sources.list file here. One line of 6 is not helpful.
inxi is available in the main repo. https://packages.debian.org/stretch/inxi . It is a system info utility which can tell you lots about your system and hardware which can be vital to troubleshoot your issues. If you can't install this, your sources are definitely wrong, or perhaps you didn't run apt-get update to refresh your package list.
Tell us what happens if you run: <enter root password>
DO NOT use PPAs, they are for Ubuntu based distros like Mint.
You say your missing firmware is rtl_nic/rt1816d-1.fw . You sure it isn't rtl8168d-1? That is included in firmware-realtek from Debian non-free repo. I'm thinking your sources are still wrong if you can't install this. As requested before, post your whole sources.list file here. One line of 6 is not helpful.
inxi is available in the main repo. https://packages.debian.org/stretch/inxi . It is a system info utility which can tell you lots about your system and hardware which can be vital to troubleshoot your issues. If you can't install this, your sources are definitely wrong, or perhaps you didn't run apt-get update to refresh your package list.
Tell us what happens if you run:
Code: Select all
su
Code: Select all
apt-get update
apt-get install inxi
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Re: Guest account has sudo privileges w/o pwd, sudoers.d War
Are you sure the installation was OK? Seems to me you have a bare-bones install without pre-configured repositories. The only way you could have gotten that is if you installed from netinstall image without successfully connecting to the Internet. Now, you have a few choices.
1. Reinstall from one of these: https://www.debian.org/CD/http-ftp/#stable
Just be sure to select your correct architecture. Later you can add non-free to the repo list fallowing instructions from https://wiki.debian.org/SourcesList
2. Try to copy the examples from mentioned wiki page to your broken install. Just use nano under root to add exact repo lines to your /etc/apt/sources.list file.
After that, making sure you have an internet ethernet cable connected, run
as root to make sure you changed the repos. Then, if it works, try
to fix your broken Debian.
1. Reinstall from one of these: https://www.debian.org/CD/http-ftp/#stable
Just be sure to select your correct architecture. Later you can add non-free to the repo list fallowing instructions from https://wiki.debian.org/SourcesList
2. Try to copy the examples from mentioned wiki page to your broken install. Just use nano under root to add exact repo lines to your /etc/apt/sources.list file.
After that, making sure you have an internet ethernet cable connected, run
Code: Select all
apt-get update
Code: Select all
apt-get install -f
Re: Guest account has sudo privileges w/o pwd, sudoers.d War
Really, adding non-free repos all over again just to get aptitude,inxi etc. Seriously?Wheelerof4te wrote:Are you sure the installation was OK? Seems to me you have a bare-bones install without pre-configured repositories. The only way you could have gotten that is if you installed from netinstall image without successfully connecting to the Internet. Now, you have a few choices.
1. Reinstall from one of these: https://www.debian.org/CD/http-ftp/#stable
Just be sure to select your correct architecture. Later you can add non-free to the repo list fallowing instructions from https://wiki.debian.org/SourcesList
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Re: Guest account has sudo privileges w/o pwd, sudoers.d War
^No, you don't need non-free repo for aptitude, inxi or most other packages. But you do need it for firmware-realtek.
Plus, there are no guest accounts in Debian, there are only user(s) and root. Users can be configured with sudo privileges during install if you read installation instructions carefully. Just leave root password blank if you want. In your other thread, I have pointed you to Jessie and Wheezy images, so try them out.
Plus, there are no guest accounts in Debian, there are only user(s) and root. Users can be configured with sudo privileges during install if you read installation instructions carefully. Just leave root password blank if you want. In your other thread, I have pointed you to Jessie and Wheezy images, so try them out.