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Looking at the infomration it appears having a single user account with the ability to sudo is all that is required. the user functions normally and if high priviledge is required sudo to root will get the job done.
That makes having root with a password another account with privilege. Can that account be disabled if active ?
compis3 wrote: ↑2023-04-01 19:50
Looking at the infomration it appears having a single user account with the ability to sudo is all that is required. the user functions normally and if high priviledge is required sudo to root will get the job done.
That makes having root with a password another account with privilege. Can that account be disabled if active ?
-l, --lock
Lock the password of the named account. This option disables a password by changing it to a value which matches no possible encrypted value (it
adds a ´!´ at the beginning of the password).
Note that this does not disable the account. The user may still be able to login using another authentication token (e.g. an SSH key). To
disable the account, administrators should use usermod --expiredate 1 (this set the account's expire date to Jan 2, 1970).
Users with a locked password are not allowed to change their password.
Do not use the usermod trick to disable root! Do not disable root, it is necessary for your system to function.
BBQdave wrote: ↑2023-03-28 14:17...I am curious how many Debian users are like me, simple workstation with focus on gui application use, such as browsers or photo editing and so on. Would disabling root account be a better recommendation for users like me?
I skip the root password during install and set it after first reboot. Think I've mentioned this before; unlike Ubuntu. Debian's grub recovery console will prompt you for a root password before it'll allow you to do anything.
we see things not as they are, but as we are.
-- anais nin