You are not logged in.
hi! im root and i want to give all the privileges to my user so he can open any program and any root folder. not in terminal (sudo gparted... for example) but i want to double click the program and open it. im using gnome. also i dont want to right click and open as admin. how can i do that?
thanks
Offline
This is a really bad idea (TM). Why can't you rely on sudo?
Offline
i dont want to use terminal all the time. i want to open root folders only with double click. is it possible?
Offline
Everything is possible. You could issue a "chmod -R 777 /root" and make all files/dirs inside it writeable by everyone.
Offline
so any program, any folder, any file will be accessable by my user from terminal and nautilus?
Offline
Yes, as well as every hacker, too. Mmmm, software exploits....
Offline
no, no, no.....if you really want to do this...get a mac..
there are really good reasons for these limitations in user access..
if you want to stay away from the terminal, i think gksu should help you with that. (still need to type your password though)... if you dont like the terminal, maybe arch linux isnt the right distro for you, how about ubuntu?
Offline
no, no, no.....if you really want to do this...get a mac..
there are really good reasons for these limitations in user access..
if you want to stay away from the terminal, i think gksu should help you with that. (still need to type your password though)... if you dont like the terminal, maybe arch linux isnt the right distro for you, how about ubuntu?
its not a solution for me but thanks! ubuntu is very simple. i want to learn from linux... not just install!
Last edited by manolos (2009-07-06 15:44:42)
Offline
eldragon wrote:no, no, no.....if you really want to do this...get a mac..
there are really good reasons for these limitations in user access..
if you want to stay away from the terminal, i think gksu should help you with that. (still need to type your password though)... if you dont like the terminal, maybe arch linux isnt the right distro for you, how about ubuntu?
its not a solution for me but thanks! ubuntu is very simple. i want to learn from linux... not just install!
Well, first lesson...what you want to do is a really bad idea.
Offline
manolos wrote:eldragon wrote:no, no, no.....if you really want to do this...get a mac..
there are really good reasons for these limitations in user access..
if you want to stay away from the terminal, i think gksu should help you with that. (still need to type your password though)... if you dont like the terminal, maybe arch linux isnt the right distro for you, how about ubuntu?
its not a solution for me but thanks! ubuntu is very simple. i want to learn from linux... not just install!
Well, first lesson...what you want to do is a really bad idea.
hahaha! ill stay in terminal thanks for the advice!
Offline
I can think of some reasons when you need to make root of a normal user. Changing the UID to 0 should do it. If not, try changing it in /etc/passwd.
usermod -ou 0 name
Offline
I can think of some reasons when you need to make root of a normal user. Changing the UID to 0 should do it. If not, try changing it in /etc/passwd.
usermod -ou 0 name
nice! and i can change it back to default easy
Last edited by manolos (2009-07-06 16:43:32)
Offline
Do not do any of these things. These are horrible ideas.
Use gksu nautilus / gksudo nautilus for opening folders with root priviledges.
"I'm Winston Wolfe. I solve problems."
~ Need moar games? [arch-games] ~ [aurcheck] AUR haz updates? ~
Offline
hmmm! ok! thanks all! ill not do it
Offline
They won't believe you anyway. :-)
Offline
If you feel there's a need to meddle around in folders that require root access frequently (or after everything is set up mostly: "at all"), you might be totally off track with something... so maybe if you try to describe what you're doing "in there", someone can tell you a better solution.
Offline
I'll not lecture you about this poor practice, but merely tell you that it is simply not the way UNIX is meant nor designed to be used. It's your system, do what you want- but if you truly want to learn how to use it, (as you have indicated) then learn the right way.
Of course, I'm sure we're not talking about matters of national security on your machine, but the root designation is a built-in security advantage of UNIX, if used properly.
Whatta ya know...I somehow ended up lecturing you anyways.
Offline
And good advice it is.
Offline