-0400
> From: "Stephen J. Carpenter" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: debian
> Subject: Re: I've hozed my root login.
> Resent-Date: 21 Jul 1998 13:32:08 -
> Resent-From: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Resent-cc: recipient list not shown: ;
>
> On Tue,
gt; To: debian
> Subject: Re: I've hozed my root login.
> Resent-Date: 21 Jul 1998 08:24:13 -
> Resent-From: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Resent-cc: recipient list not shown: ;
>
> >
> > As root I ran chsh and accidentally entered an
> > invalid shell
lt;[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: I've hozed my root login.
> Resent-Date: 21 Jul 1998 06:13:23 -
> Resent-From: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Resent-cc: recipient list not shown: ;
>
> As root I ran chsh and accidentally entere
>
>
>
> > This is way to big an operation to solve this problem. You can specify
> > which shell you want to su:
> >
> > su -s /bin/bash
>
> Thanks for the help, unfortunately it didn't work. It seemed to ignore
> the shell directive, it spit out something about
> " /bad/shell/path not valid"
> This is way to big an operation to solve this problem. You can specify
> which shell you want to su:
>
> su -s /bin/bash
Thanks for the help, unfortunately it didn't work. It seemed to ignore
the shell directive, it spit out something about
" /bad/shell/path not valid" even though I scecific
On Tue, Jul 21, 1998 at 10:24:09AM +0200, E.L. Meijer (Eric) wrote:
> >
> > As root I ran chsh and accidentally entered an
> > invalid shell path. chsh didn't detect this mistake
> > like it does for a regular user!
> > I wasn't aware of my blunder till next time I tried to
> > login as root.
> >
>
> As root I ran chsh and accidentally entered an
> invalid shell path. chsh didn't detect this mistake
> like it does for a regular user!
> I wasn't aware of my blunder till next time I tried to
> login as root.
> I tried booting from the rescue floppy and then mounting
> my linux drive so that
As root I ran chsh and accidentally entered an
invalid shell path. chsh didn't detect this mistake
like it does for a regular user!
I wasn't aware of my blunder till next time I tried to
login as root.
I tried booting from the rescue floppy and then mounting
my linux drive so that I might edit /et
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