Стандартный пароль antix linux

Стандартный пароль antix linux

I have got a problem. A few days ago I downloaded antiX-15-V_386-full.iso and burned it on a cd-rom and on a pendrive (with software rufus 2.6). It was all right for some days, I used them, testing connection and so on.

3 days ago the live-cd install prompted this message :

ok — starting network connction manager : wicd
live-restore-services : services link restored (this last in italian : ripristino dei collegamenti dei servizi)

Welcome to Antix. Powered by debian

For cli install, login as root (password=root) and type cli-installer
Follow the instructions
Antix1 login. and so on

If you type login and password»root» it prompts a command line. No desktop, no gui, and I don’t have any idea of commands I can type here («help» apart).

Maybe the cd-rom is broken ?
I tried changing many options in the boot screen but I had no results, what can I do to restore the default gui interface ?

If you did a upgrade and said yes to package maintainers for slim.conf.
Sometimes you will lose the slim login screen.
Anyhows.

What happens if your just type in

Then try if it does not work

But. You might have broke something also.

I’ve snap some pictures. I can’ t believe a read only memory can be modified after its burn

Specs for the box you are using?

It’s a notebook Dell 510 Latitude with 2Gb Ram and a little hard disk with a single Xp sp3 partition. It’s not an hardware failure because I use it currently.

Yesterday I tried the live cd with another pc, a desktop p4 3ghz with 2 Gb Ram and so on,

I noticed there is a timer at the prompt of login and password, and after a few seconds it continues until the desktop (Picture 1).

It is surprising, and the following error too is a surprise I’ve never seen on the noteboook : the missing dektop image (Picture 2)

So I tried again with the notebook, and I’ve got the usual prompt, with no timer and the same message for any command I type : server error (Picture 3)

Some additional information might help community members to assist you.

To check the CD drive is OK
Can you boot the Dell using a different live distro burned to a different CD disk?

When you downloaded the antiX ISO:
Did you verify its integrity by checking its md5sum?

In your opening post you mention putting antiX on a CD and USB stick:
Does the problem occur when booting the Dell from the USB stick?

When booting the Dell from CD:
At the first bootloader screen what parameters do you change before booting the system?

When the Dell boots from CD to the command prompt:
Log in as root
Provide the output of the following commands

5. When the Dell boots from CD to the command prompt:
Log in as root
Provide the output of the following commands. . . .

ok, I grabbed the picture you see

4. When booting the Dell from CD:
At the first bootloader screen what parameters do you change before booting the system?

yes, all the options I need (Italian, berlin, mount all, 1024, save) and no one of them, simply hitting accept as it

3. In your opening post you mention putting antiX on a CD and USB stick:
Does the problem occur when booting the Dell from the USB stick?

The usb install has other problems, first times nothing to say, then after few days I noticed that the wifi goes off and you must start it manually, the connection is on, the wifi signal ix excellent but iceweals says the page not found error message. I tried to change the desktop image but it didnt’ save it, and at the boot I have again the default image. I will build the bootable pendrive with unetbootin instead of rufus, and from into the Antix desktop

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2. When you downloaded the antiX ISO:
Did you verify its integrity by checking its md5sum?

1. Can you boot the Dell using a different live distro burned to a different CD disk?

Usually, for your request I tried gparted (2011), grafpup (2008) Runtime Software (knoppix and driveimage), Ubuntu (2010 and 2012) and other windows based (Bart Pe Ubcd4win, Hiren’s boot Cd etc.

I’ve just tried Ubuntu 2010 and 2012 and it works very well

Источник

Какой пароль root по умолчанию для AntiX?

Однако я столкнулся с уникальной проблемой, которая может помочь другим. Я начал устранять неполадки с -vvv, и из-за того, что было так много данных, я пропустил важное предупреждение (извлеченный урок — начинать с более широкого( -v )).Ключ хоста для сервера изменился (новая сборка ), и я отключил проверку ключа в моей конфигурации ssh _, поэтому, поскольку это был несоответствующий ключ, пересылка X11 была отключена SSH.

Пароль AntiX по умолчанию: demo

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What’s the Root Password for antiX-17.1 Live USB?

Philosophers have interpreted the world in many ways; the point is to change it. antiX with runit — leaner and meaner.

Renato ZX

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Use of user and root passwords in antiX

In installing antiX and trying to change it to my preferences afterwards it struck me that I was never asked to type a password for anything like updating, installing new packages, or using synaptic.
I am relative newby to linux, though having some experience with Mint. Upon install I provided a username and a root password. Then I installed things like firefox and synaptic through package installer, and used synaptic to install xfburn (all without the need to type any password). Installing xfburn gave the message: Download is performed unsandboxed as root as file ‘/root/.synaptic/tmp//tmp_cl’ couldn’t be accessed by user ‘_apt’. – pkgAcquire::Run (13: Permission denied). Then I started to worry a little bit. Did I mixed up user and root rights and compromised the security of my system? From Mint I learned that the password was always asked for updating and installing new packages. But then, there the first user was always root if I remember well. Then I got the idea to provide the first user in antiX with a password and to disable autologin. Now I am being asked for a user password when using the antiX updater or launching the package installer. I would still prefer to autologin but use passwords for such tasks as installing new packages if that is possible. (Reinstalling xfburn eventually happened without the message quoted above) Is the policy of password use in antiX any different from other distros? I realise I will have to learn a bit more about when using root or user is appropriate, but any comment on this is highly appreciated. For the rest, I like antiX a lot, particularly it’s speed on my old desktop.

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Brian Masinick

christophe

I don’t think so. I know that there is a short time when, after entering password for escalation to root privileges, you don’t need to enter a password for another such action. I think it’s something like 15 minutes, but I’m not sure. (Maybe someone else can answer that.) If you originally set up root to have no password, maybe that’s the reason you were not asked to provide one? I think you should have a password for any user, in my opinion. Only login with your normal user. Autologin is fine – for the normal user. Never use root to login for normal usage, just use the normal user, and escalate to root permissions as-needed. I’m not sure what you mean by “first user,” but you’ll have “root” and another one that is your normal user when you install antiX. Actually the installer offers to skip the root user if you want to.

I would still prefer to autologin but use passwords for such tasks as installing new packages if that is possible. (Reinstalling xfburn eventually happened without the message quoted above)

  • This reply was modified 1 year, 1 month ago by christophe.
  • This reply was modified 1 year, 1 month ago by christophe.

confirmed antiX frugaler, since 2019

Thanks Brian and Christophe, very helpful.
I must say that there are indeed variations among distros in how they handle the sudo command. Not all have a certain window of time like in AntiX as Christophe noted. In one of the ubuntu variations for instance I could do things in synaptic and (de)install various packages after providing the password at the first instance, but only if I kept synaptic open. As soon as as the synaptic window is closed sudo rights were also closed. That does not seem to be the case in AntiX in my experience.
I am following Brian’s suggestion and diving a bit more into how sudo rights work and were they are allocated. Haven’t found yet how and were the window of time for sudo rights are made (it is totally new for me, so it takes time), any further suggestions still welcome.

iznit

how and were the window of time for sudo rights are made

man sudoers
If you don’t have time to fully read it, press ” / ” slash key while viewing to initiate a search and search for timeout

The command “sudo visudo” will open sudoers file for editing and you can adjust the timeout amount there.

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