On 11/27/2012 04:05 AM, Klearchos-Angelos Gkountras wrote:
Take a live CD with same architecture as your currently machine.
D
chroot is one solution ... i think you need to do that from knoppix live
cd if the architecture is the same as your machine ; knoppix is i386 so
If your machine is i386
Hi
On Tue, Nov 27, 2012 at 12:43:29AM +, Gary Roach wrote:
I've done the unthinkable. I accidentally changed root to qroot in my
/etc/passwd file and then proceeded to log out of root. All of the files
in /etc were changed to owner qroot and the root password doesn't work
any more. I
On Mon, Nov 26, 2012 at 07:37:39PM -0600, green wrote:
Gary Roach wrote at 2012-11-26 18:43 -0600:
I've done the unthinkable. I accidentally changed root to qroot in
my /etc/passwd file and then proceeded to log out of root. All of
the files in /etc were changed to owner qroot and the root
Take a live CD with same architecture as your currently machine.
D
chroot is one solution ... i think you need to do that from knoppix live
cd if the architecture is the same as your machine ; knoppix is i386 so
If your machine is i386 or amd64 with mutiarch will work
boot the live cd
open a
I've done the unthinkable. I accidentally changed root to qroot in my
/etc/passwd file and then proceeded to log out of root. All of the files
in /etc were changed to owner qroot and the root password doesn't work
any more. I have a new Knoppix CD and a new Debian network install CD.
Can I use
Gary Roach wrote at 2012-11-26 18:43 -0600:
I've done the unthinkable. I accidentally changed root to qroot in
my /etc/passwd file and then proceeded to log out of root. All of
the files in /etc were changed to owner qroot and the root password
doesn't work any more. I have a new Knoppix CD
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