On Wed, 7 Mar 2007, Anders Johansson
Secondly, between 9.1 and 10.2, suse changed user IDs. Before, a user got uid 100 and up by default, in 10.2 he gets 1000 and up. So odds are your ^^^ On my 9.0 box, UID 100 is:
privoxy:x:100:101:Daemon user for privoxy:/var/lib/privoxy:/bin/false ^^^ ^^^ UID ||| GID And the first actual user is: davjam:x:500:100:David:/home/davjam:/bin/bash ^^^ ^^^ UID ||| GID As an aside, on my 9.1 box, and all the other SUSE boxes, the same first user is: davjam:x:1000:100:David:/home/davjam:/bin/bash and the only reason for it having a UID starting of 1000 is that I changed it after 10.1 was released. This was so that my UID, and the other users on my systems, could have the same UID across different boxes and thereby eliminate problems with NFS mounted file-systems due to mis-matched UIDs. Regards, David Bolt -- Member of Team Acorn checking nodes at 50 Mnodes/s: http://www.distributed.net/ RISCOS 3.11 | SUSE 10.0 32bit | SUSE 10.1 32bit | openSUSE 10.2 32bit RISCOS 3.6 | SUSE 10.0 64bit | SUSE 10.1 64bit | openSUSE 10.2 64bit TOS 4.02 | SUSE 9.3 32bit | | openSUSE 10.3a1 32bit -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org