Jumping Mouse wrote: > Hi Clint and others, > > I tried: > >> # rm spwd* pwd* passwd* ptmp> # pwd_mkdb /etc/master.passwd
pointless. > then > #passwd username > > but I am still getting: (for all users) > > pwd_mkdb: corrupted entrypwd_mkdb: at line #24pwd_mkdb: /etc/ptmp: > Inappropriate file type or formatpasswd: /etc/master.passwd: unchanged right. If the file is corrupted, the file is corrupted, it isn't going to spend a lot of time trying to push a change in and maybe make it worse. It is curious that it does let you change root's PW, but that's nice, it does let you get back in and fix the rest. > I have searched the faqs but have not been able to find a good solution to > this issue. Does anyone have any thoughts? EXACTLY what it says. Something around line 24 is wrong. A FEW ideas: * Line break at col 80 that you are assuming is a wrap, but it isn't. * Trailing spaces. * Blank lines (including an extra newline at end-of-file) Those are some of the errors I've made. I've probably repressed the really funny ones. You are free to make your own. :) You can add and delete users all you want, there's something wrong with the master.passwd file. When you call up vipw or passwd, it makes a copy of that file to /etc/ptmp, you edit that file, then it does a sanity check and if it passes the sanity check, it rolls that file back to master.passwd, and makes the rest of the files (not necessarily in that order). Yours doesn't pass the sanity check. Before you run vipw/passwd/whatever there is no /etc/ptmp file unless someone killed an edit inappropriately. If that's the case, it doesn't let you edit the file in the first place. Your file is corrupted. You need to fix it. Don't edit the file and then expect us to spot the error unless it is really blatant, and at this point, don't bother trying to convey much info at all over that mailer you are using. :) Worst case, assuming you are the only one (or one of few) on the system, grab the /etc/master.passwd from the etcXX.tgz file of the appropriate version of OpenBSD you are running, stick it in /etc, run vipw, make a trivial change (or run mkwhateveritis), exit, change root's PW, and re-populate the file one user at a time. You already know unpleasant things happened to your passwd file. You have a regular "user" at line 24...that's been a while since a regular user popped up that early in the file. You probably have got lots of problems there. Fortunately, it is pretty easy to rebuild. Just save a copy of your current version, and after the dust settles, copy over the individual users you need (and watch for wraps!). And ONLY those users... Nick.