Hi, my idea would be to have <shell>/bin/tcsh</shell> within the <user>...</user> section for root. At least that is were I found a shell entry in a profile I have for another system (SLES10). However it is for /bin/bash, so I can't say whether root has this shell because of this entry or because of the default. Still I would consider it worth a try. Kind regards, Björn Am Dienstag 22 Juli 2008 schrieb Wil Decius:
I've created an Opensuse11 AutoYast profile.
I've assigned the "root" user's shell to "/bin/tcsh".
The generated AutoYast source is:
<users config:type="list"> <user> <username>root</username> <encrypted config:type="boolean">true</encrypted>
<inact>-1</inact> <max>-1</max> <min>-1</min> <warn>-1</warn> $2a...$O </user> </users><expire></expire> <group>25</group> <groups>video,dialout</groups> <home>/home</home> <inactive>-1</inactive> <shell>/bin/tcsh</shell> <skel>/etc/skel</skel> The AutoYast install works, and I can boot from the resulting system.
But, "root" comes up in /bin/bash shell. I can easily "chsh -s /bin/tcsh" @ shell; next reboot all's OK.
How can I make sure the AutoYast-installed system correctly assigns root-shell to /bin/tcsh?
Wil
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