Good Day All . . .
If this has been already addressed then I apologise but I searched for "root user" and went through two pages of fifteen and I found nothing close.
So here goes.
To start with, I am uncomfortable using sudo instead of su and this may show in the questions.
If I configure a Kubuntu 6.0.6.1 system with two or more users then each user has access through sudo to modify the system settings. I loaded a test run onto one of my removeable hard drives and as a user I can enter my password and modify as administrator. Do this continue with two or more users?
I create daily backups but I was unable to copy some of my username files from my backup to the /home/user area. Both user names are identical but Kubuntu treats the files as userid 500. Any opinions?
Is it possible to create a root user and do away (am I kicking a sacred cow) with the sudo method and run a su. Is there anything internally in kubuntu that would be screwed up?
Any help is appreciated.
Thanks.
If this has been already addressed then I apologise but I searched for "root user" and went through two pages of fifteen and I found nothing close.
So here goes.
To start with, I am uncomfortable using sudo instead of su and this may show in the questions.
If I configure a Kubuntu 6.0.6.1 system with two or more users then each user has access through sudo to modify the system settings. I loaded a test run onto one of my removeable hard drives and as a user I can enter my password and modify as administrator. Do this continue with two or more users?
I create daily backups but I was unable to copy some of my username files from my backup to the /home/user area. Both user names are identical but Kubuntu treats the files as userid 500. Any opinions?
Is it possible to create a root user and do away (am I kicking a sacred cow) with the sudo method and run a su. Is there anything internally in kubuntu that would be screwed up?
Any help is appreciated.
Thanks.
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