This issue still exists in squeeze testing. It should be made more clear
during the installation that gksu must be installed for a sudo only
system to work correctly and it should be easier to set up a sudo only
system after installation. Also, the "user-setup-apply" script does not
configure polic
On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 01:29:00AM +0200, Josselin Mouette wrote:
> Le samedi 17 mai 2008 à 18:26 -0400, Avery Fay a écrit :
> > The latest snapshots of the debian installer allow root to have no
> > password (pure sudo system). Since gksu seems to default to su behavior
> > instead of sudo behav
Le samedi 17 mai 2008 à 20:40 -0400, Avery Fay a écrit :
> I didn't install the desktop task during the initial installation, so I
> don't think it can be solved in the installer. (I did install it after
> initial installation)
It could be solved if the alternative belonged in another package (l
I didn't install the desktop task during the initial installation, so I
don't think it can be solved in the installer. (I did install it after
initial installation)
Gustavo Noronha Silva wrote:
Hey!
On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 01:29 +0200, Josselin Mouette wrote:
In this case, I think the insta
Le samedi 17 mai 2008 à 18:26 -0400, Avery Fay a écrit :
> Package: gksu
> Version: 2.0.0-5
> Severity: important
>
> The latest snapshots of the debian installer allow root to have no
> password (pure sudo system). Since gksu seems to default to su behavior
> instead of sudo behavior, this brea
Package: gksu
Version: 2.0.0-5
Severity: important
The latest snapshots of the debian installer allow root to have no
password (pure sudo system). Since gksu seems to default to su behavior
instead of sudo behavior, this breaks all of gnomes admin menu items. I
think gksu should check whether r
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