On śro, Apr 24, 2019 at 10:25 PM, Knurpht-openSUSE
Op woensdag 24 april 2019 20:09:04 CEST schreef Stasiek Michalski:
On śro, Apr 24, 2019 at 8:05 PM, Wolfgang Bauer
wrote: Am Mittwoch, 24. April 2019, 18:56:49 schrieb Knurpht-openSUSE:
My 2 cents: Please, NO !!! One of the things I've always loved about openSUSE is the strict
separation
between system and user. Entering YaST means the user is going to
perform
system related tasks.
You'd still have to enter the root password though, just later when you call any module from YaST Control Center.
Unless you manually override that in the polkit config of course. ;-)
or run `sudo -E yast --qt`
I'm even firmly against having no 'root' but just plain sudo and
the user's
password.
Even "sudo" requires the *root* password in openSUSE's default config, as you should know. ;-)
Although, installer's default is also to have root have the same password as user, which makes me question security of that policy ;)
As the first user, yes. What if you have multiple users?
There is a reason DE settings let you choose between making `Administrator` or `Standard` user when creating a new user on the system. Without wheel group it's pointless, but it's there. LCP [Stasiek] https://lcp.world -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org