I really did it this time. While looking over all my options carefully, I noted 
that in the documentation for kuser -- kde's user manager -- there's a line 
that says "delete users at your own risk"! That made me a little nervous about 
deleting a user with any method I chose. So I noticed that I could change the 
uid on the command line or in kuser, so I tried doing it in kuser.  No problem 
-- until I logged out. Then kdm flaked out. It wouldn't let me log in with the 
gui, so I dropped to a terminal and logged in, then did startx. I went to the 
kde login manager and had to tweak a few things there before getting it to 
allow users to shutdown the machine themselves, etc. My account appears to be 
working OK now, but when my daughter logs in she gets a blue screen with an 
error box at the top left corner saying: "Could not start kstartupconfig. Check 
your installation." Then when she clicks the OK button it throws her back to 
the login gui. She did Internet
 searches for her homework this evening logged on as me. Doug, I'm going to try 
your suggestion now and delete my daughter's account using  "deluser 
--remove-all-files --backup" after "cd /var/tmp." Then I'll recreate her 
account and hopefully get back closer to normal. I hope to report success. . . .

--Elmer


-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org 
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org

Reply via email to