You have managed to change the locale settings. I do not see how, a priori.
You may have overwritten some libraries with garbage.
Does this garbage show for all users? (If you don't know logon as some other user). Please include the output of this in your answer:
-- if you can make it work, otherwise tell us a lot about your shell and your OS. Like what your locale is supposed to be, name of OS, etc.
Hi All,
I have changed the shell of the root accidentally to /sbin/bash :mad:
How do I change that? :(
To change that I need to go to ok prompt I think, and there I need to mount the root file system in order to make changes to the respective file.
Can any one please suggest how do I do... (4 Replies)
The group of the /root folder has been changed and then logged out
I am not able to log in to the /root user as it is saying Xsession log in not allowed
Is there any way that the group of the /root folder be changed? (1 Reply)
> id root
0(root) 1(other)
From CIS scanning result"it should make sure the root's gid is equal to 0", so I don't know what's the impact for that change to whole system? BTW, why is there a group named other under solaris? what does group "other" do ?
Thanks very much! (3 Replies)
hi
i am new to unix and i have abig task. i have to \run particular commands having root privileges from a non root user. i know sudo is one of the way but i need sum other approach kindly help
Thanks (5 Replies)
Hi Experts,
I have create a new user with uid and gid as 0 in SuSE-11 Server. After that all the files having root owner ship are showing as new user name as owner. If I login as root, and type 'id' command, it also shows the new user.
Sample output from my server.
host:~ # id
uid=0(test)... (4 Replies)
I've been through many threads before i decide to create a separate thread.
I can't really find the solution to my (simple) problem.
Here's what I'm trying to achieve:
As "canar" user I want to run a command, let's say "/opt/ocaml/bin/ocaml" as "duck" user.
The only to achieve this is to... (1 Reply)
Hi!! one strange problem occurred with my RHEL 5 box.
i'm having logs folder with ownership of non-root user. Created some files with root user under logs folder.
here is the scene:
-rw-r----- 1 root root 1048227 Feb 28 12:34 SystemOut_13.02.28_12.34.10.log
-rw-r----- 1 root root ... (6 Replies)
Currently in my system Red Hat is installed. And Many user connect to my machine via SSH Techia Terminal.
I want to give some users a root level access.
Can anyone please help me how to make it possible. I too searched on the Google but didn't find the correct way
Regards
ADI (4 Replies)
Hello
i am running AIX 6.1. i recently changed the root password using passwd and pwdadm. while the new password works fine, i am still able to login using the old password. is there anyway this can disabled\fixed
thanks (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: dnlsingh
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
setleds
SETLEDS(1) General Commands Manual SETLEDS(1)NAME
setleds - set the keyboard leds
SYNOPSIS
setleds [-v] [-L] [-D] [-F] [{+|-}num] [{+|-}caps] [{+|-}scroll]
DESCRIPTION
Setleds reports and changes the led flag settings of a VT (namely NumLock, CapsLock and ScrollLock). Without arguments, setleds prints the
current settings. With arguments, it sets or clears the indicated flags (and leaves the others unchanged). The settings before and after
the change are reported if the -v flag is given.
The led flag settings are specific for each VT (and the VT corresponding to stdin is used).
By default (or with option -F), setleds will only change the VT flags (and their setting may be reflected by the keyboard leds).
With option -D, setleds will change both the VT flags and their default settings (so that a subsequent reset will not undo the change).
This might be useful for people who always want to have numlock set.
With option -L, setleds will not touch the VT flags, but only change the leds. From this moment on, the leds will no longer reflect the VT
flags (but display whatever is put into them). The command setleds -L (without further arguments) will restore the situation in which the
leds reflect the VT flags.
One might use setleds in /etc/rc to define the initial and default state of NumLock, e.g. by
INITTY=/dev/tty[1-8]
for tty in $INITTY; do
setleds -D +num < $tty
done
OPTIONS -num +num
Clear or set NumLock. (At present, the NumLock setting influences the interpretation of keypad keys. Pressing the NumLock key com-
plements the NumLock setting.)
-caps +caps
Clear or set CapsLock. (At present, the CapsLock setting complements the Shift key when applied to letters. Pressing the CapsLock
key complements the CapsLock setting.)
-scroll +scroll
Clear or set ScrollLock. (At present, pressing the ScrollLock key (or ^S/^Q) stops/starts console output.)
BUGS
In keyboard application mode the NumLock key does not influence the NumLock flag setting.
SEE ALSO loadkeys(1)
24 Sep 1994 SETLEDS(1)