Mailinglist Archive: opensuse-factory (757 mails)
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Re: [opensuse-factory] Package Management Design and Experience
- From: houghi <houghi@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 30 May 2006 17:47:21 +0200
- Message-id: <20060530154721.GA26665@penne>
On Tue, May 30, 2006 at 03:40:35PM +0200, Marcel Hilzinger wrote:
> You can ad the root passwort each time, if you want. But why should other
> users not be able to leave this step out?
I click on the world and then on Configure. I can't find where to remove
it. As I forgot how I got to this stage I did a new installation. This is
what I get is the following:
I see that there are updates available, so I click on it and then on
Update. Either I add a privaleged user or I can click OK to accknowledge
that I do not have the rights.
If I click OK, I can't update. If I enter the rootpassword, I can always
update. After entering the root password, I get: User was successfully
added to zmd.
The next time I am NOT asked for a password.
> > Yes, that does matter. It is not up to the software updater. It is up to
> > root to change sudoers.
> Yes. And that's how it works in 10.1. So I really do not see your problem...
The "problem" I have is that people want to change it.
--
houghi http://houghi.org http://www.plainfaqs.org/linux/
http://www.netmeister.org/news/learn2quote.html
>
> Today I went outside. My pupils have never been tinier...
> You can ad the root passwort each time, if you want. But why should other
> users not be able to leave this step out?
I click on the world and then on Configure. I can't find where to remove
it. As I forgot how I got to this stage I did a new installation. This is
what I get is the following:
I see that there are updates available, so I click on it and then on
Update. Either I add a privaleged user or I can click OK to accknowledge
that I do not have the rights.
If I click OK, I can't update. If I enter the rootpassword, I can always
update. After entering the root password, I get: User was successfully
added to zmd.
The next time I am NOT asked for a password.
> > Yes, that does matter. It is not up to the software updater. It is up to
> > root to change sudoers.
> Yes. And that's how it works in 10.1. So I really do not see your problem...
The "problem" I have is that people want to change it.
--
houghi http://houghi.org http://www.plainfaqs.org/linux/
http://www.netmeister.org/news/learn2quote.html
>
> Today I went outside. My pupils have never been tinier...
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