On Thu, 8 Apr 2004, Michael Alle wrote:
> yeah, thats it .. i already thought about webmin, but i had headaches about
> webmin beeing accessible all the time for the world ..
> good solution !!!
>
Fwiw by default, the Debian webmin packages use SSL, only listen on
localhost, and automatically
"Michael Alle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> i get twiddle fingers doing that ...
> useradd, not one of my favorites !
adduser might be better, IIRC there's some differences.
--
Paul Johnson
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
Yea it's just really easy doing it with webmin. I've been doing it this way
for four years. As long as you turn it off when your not using it you don't
need to worry about it...
Ralph
On Thursday 08 April 2004 10:39 am, Michael Alle wrote:
> i get twiddle fingers doing that ...
> useradd, .
i get twiddle fingers doing that ...
useradd, not one of my favorites !
"Paul Johnson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
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yeah, thats it .. i already thought about webmin, but i had headaches about
webmin beeing accessible all the time for the world ..
good solution !!!
"Ralph Crongeyer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Install Webmin.
Set it up not to run on boot. Then when you
"Michael Alle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> i wonder if theres any grafical usermanger (based on qt, tcl/tk) to do
> more comfortable jobs like adding / deleting users, groups, adding
> groups to users, changin their passwd ...
What's wrong with the command-line tools, which get the job done und
Install Webmin.
Set it up not to run on boot. Then when you want to use it just ssh in to your
box "su -" to root and "/etc/init.d/webmin start". Then point a browser to
https://yourhost:1/ login in and add, edit, delete, users or
whatever. then logout and go back to your ssh session an
Mhmhm, I didn“t want to install X for simple user management,
since the machine is going be a remote www-server, where only ssh
access for me is possible, but thanks so far,
"Kent West" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Michael Alle wrote:
>
> >Hello !
> >
> >i w
I am not sure but I think Webmin (www.webmin.com) has that capability.
It works through a http interface.
-Original Message-
From: Kent West [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, April 07, 2004 7:33 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: User manager - Checked by Vexira -
Michael
Michael Alle wrote:
Hello !
i wonder if theres any grafical usermanger (based on qt, tcl/tk) to do
more comfortable jobs like adding / deleting users, groups, adding
groups to users, changin their passwd ...
is there any ?
any help appreciated
m.alle
I just last night noticed kuser in KDE
Rob <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> A while back a friend of mine showed me a Red Hat machine they were
> running at work.They had X setup, and there was some sort of user
> manager tool they had up there, which supposedly came with the system.
> It did all kinds of snappy things like add and remove
> A while back a friend of mine showed me a Red Hat machine they were
> running at work.They had X setup, and there was some sort of user
> manager tool they had up there, which supposedly came with the system.
> It did all kinds of snappy things like add and remove users, allowing
> you to pick sh
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