On Sun, Aug 17, 2008 at 08:37:01AM -0400, Robert Pendell wrote: >Charles Wilson wrote: >> Always prints the standard well-known users, even when just requesting a >> single user's entry: >> >> $ uname -a >> CYGWIN_NT-5.1 VMWARE-XP 1.7.0(0.186/5/3) 2008-08-15 15:17 i686 Cygwin >> >> $ mkpasswd -l -u cwilson >> SYSTEM:*:18:544:,S-1-5-18:: >> LocalService:*:19:544:U-NT AUTHORITY\LocalService,S-1-5-19:: >> NetworkService:*:20:544:U-NT AUTHORITY\NetworkService,S-1-5-20:: >> Administrators:*:544:544:,S-1-5-32-544:: >> cwilson:unused:1036:513:cwilson,U-VMWARE-XP\cwilson,S-1-5-21-3395897280-1512205858-4128055458-1036:/home/cwilson:/bin/bash >> >> So, after running (a modified) ssh-host-config on a clean system -- >> which added sshd and cyg_server users -- I now have three copies of >> SYSTEM et. al. in my /etc/passwd. So, iu-config complained loudly. >> >> -- >> Chuck > >This one I can reproduce. Normally I would say to post a cygcheck.out >file however it seems that you couldn't do that according to your other >post. I would still like to see what you can get from it however. I >will attach the same cygcheck that I did on the other post. > >I will also expand on this. > >`mkpasswd` starts listing then segfaults. Backtrace and gdb debug >output attached from this as well as the stackdump file > >Somehow I think that mkpasswd isn't intended to be run without arguments >but the help information from --help indicates that all options are >optional unless specified otherwise.
You're running gdb against a non-debug version of mkpasswd so the output isn't really useful: This GDB was configured as "i686-pc-cygwin"... (no debugging symbols found) I'll see if I can figure out why this is segfaulting. I can duplicate this too. cgf -- Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/