Good afternoon
Why do I have to open a group?

2 years ago
sudo was no problem.

Regards

Sophie

Thank You
________________________________
Von: Timothy M Butterworth <timothy.m.butterwo...@gmail.com>
Gesendet: Montag, 22. Januar 2024 00:07
An: Schwibinger Michael <h...@hotmail.com>
Cc: Greg Wooledge <g...@wooledge.org>; debian-user@lists.debian.org 
<debian-user@lists.debian.org>
Betreff: Re: su su- sudo dont work



On Sun, Jan 21, 2024 at 4:07 PM Schwibinger Michael 
<h...@hotmail.com<mailto:h...@hotmail.com>> wrote:
Thank You
Example
I say

sudo apt-get install firefox
Reaction LINUX
This is not allowed we send a message to the admin.

This error message means that your account is not in the sudo group.

Run the command "groups" and look for the group sudo.
groups

Here is the command to add a user account to the sudo group. You will need to 
run it as root.
usermod -a -G sudo <Your User Account>

I do open root terminal
there its working.
Regards
Sophie

________________________________
Von: Greg Wooledge <g...@wooledge.org<mailto:g...@wooledge.org>>
Gesendet: Samstag, 20. Januar 2024 14:14
An: debian-user@lists.debian.org<mailto:debian-user@lists.debian.org> 
<debian-user@lists.debian.org<mailto:debian-user@lists.debian.org>>
Betreff: Re: su su- sudo dont work

On Sat, Jan 20, 2024 at 01:26:06PM +0000, Schwibinger Michael wrote:
> Good afternoon.
> Root terminal is fine.
> What do I do wrong?
> What did I destroy?
>
> PC does have only one user=admin.
>
> Regards Sophie
> Is it the rescue mode?

Explain, please.

Your Subject: header says "su su- sudo dont work".  What does this MEAN?

Please show us your attempts to USE each of these commands, and the
results that you got.  This means, run the commands in a terminal
window, and then PASTE the contents of that terminal window into the
body of your next email.  Show us the shell prompt, the command as you
typed it, and the full output.

In other words, show us WHAT IS WRONG, or at least what appears wrong.

In addition, please give basic background information -- what version
of Debian you are running, what desktop environment if any, how you
logged in (*especially* if it isn't just a "standard graphical login
for your desktop environment"), and anything else you can think of
that might be relevant.

How does "rescue mode" factor into the problem?

When you installed Debian, did you give a root password, or did you
leave it blank?

Finally, it would be helpful for you to run the "id" command (with no
arguments), in the same terminal session as your failed su or sudo
command(s), and include that command and its output in your paste.



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