Back to My Mac: Choose one MobileMe account per computer to use with Back to My Mac i

 
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Old 09-02-2009
Back to My Mac: Choose one MobileMe account per computer to use with Back to My Mac i

Back to My Mac allows you to easily connect to your remote Macs that have been configured with your MobileMe account. In Mac OS X v10.5 Leopard, only one MobileMe account can be set up for Back to My Mac at any given time. This article applies if you have more than one MobileMe account configured on your Mac, are using Mac OS X v10.5, and want to use Back to My Mac. If you only use one MobileMe account on your Mac, or you are using Mac OS X v10.6 Snow Leopard, this article does not apply to you.Although you can configure Mac OS X with different user accounts that might each be configured with a different MobileMe account in Mac OS v10.5, Back to My Mac can only be set up with one MobileMe account per computer. See below to learn how to designate a MobileMe account for Back to My Mac in Mac OS X v10.5 if you use multiple accounts.

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PASSWD(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						 PASSWD(1)

NAME
passwd -- modify a user's password SYNOPSIS
passwd [-i infosystem [-l location]] [-u authname] [user] DESCRIPTION
The passwd utility changes the user's password. If the user is not the super-user, passwd first prompts for the current password and will not continue unless the correct password is entered. When entering the new password, the characters entered do not echo, in order to avoid the password being seen by a passer-by. The passwd utility prompts for the new password twice in order to detect typing errors. The new password should be at least six characters long and not purely alphabetic. Its total length should be less than _PASSWORD_LEN (cur- rently 128 characters), although some directory systems allow longer passwords. Numbers, upper case letters, and meta characters are encour- aged. Once the password has been verified, passwd communicates the new password to the directory system. -i infosystem This option specifies where the password update should be applied. Under Mac OS X 10.5 and later, supported directory systems are: PAM (default) Pluggable Authentication Modules. opendirectory A system conforming to Open Directory APIs and supporting updates (including LDAP, etc). If no -l option is specified, the search node is used. file The local flat-files (included for legacy configurations). nis A remote NIS server containing the user's password. -l location This option causes the password to be updated in the given location of the chosen directory system. for file, location may be a file name (/etc/master.passwd is the default) for nis, location may be a NIS domainname for opendirectory, location may be a directory node name for PAM, location is not used -u authname This option specifies the user name to use when authenticating to the directory node. user This optional argument specifies the user account whose password will be changed. This account's current password may be required, even when run as the super-user, depending on the directory system. FILES
/etc/master.passwd The user database /etc/passwd A Version 7 format password file /etc/passwd.XXXXXX Temporary copy of the password file SEE ALSO
chpass(1), login(1), dscl(1), passwd(5), pwd_mkdb(8), vipw(8) Robert Morris and Ken Thompson, UNIX password security. HISTORY
A passwd command appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX. Mac OS X August 18, 2008 Mac OS X