diff options
author | V3n3RiX <venerix@koprulu.sector> | 2021-10-12 01:06:08 +0100 |
---|---|---|
committer | V3n3RiX <venerix@koprulu.sector> | 2021-10-12 01:06:08 +0100 |
commit | 274322b84acc35f6a4c4bff08cfdce25cfe46c3b (patch) | |
tree | b3e20c8b707b45bb143709b3498be6d799a2c0d9 /app-misc/calamares-config-redcore/files/modules/users.conf | |
parent | b564bb4de4c10182b602c51177d4fed50e7b001d (diff) |
app-misc/calamares-config-redcore : version bump
Diffstat (limited to 'app-misc/calamares-config-redcore/files/modules/users.conf')
-rw-r--r-- | app-misc/calamares-config-redcore/files/modules/users.conf | 120 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 120 deletions
diff --git a/app-misc/calamares-config-redcore/files/modules/users.conf b/app-misc/calamares-config-redcore/files/modules/users.conf index 8a1addc0..a94d71ca 100644 --- a/app-misc/calamares-config-redcore/files/modules/users.conf +++ b/app-misc/calamares-config-redcore/files/modules/users.conf @@ -1,18 +1,4 @@ -# Configuration for the one-user-system user module. -# -# Besides these settings, the user module also places the following -# keys into the globalconfig area, based on user input in the view step. -# -# - hostname -# - username -# - password (obscured) -# - autologinUser (if enabled, set to username) -# -# These globalconfig keys are set when the jobs for this module -# are created. --- -# Used as default groups for the created user. -# Adjust to your Distribution defaults. defaultGroups: - lp - lpadmin @@ -32,120 +18,14 @@ defaultGroups: - messagebus - smbshare -# Some Distributions require a 'autologin' group for the user. -# Autologin causes a user to become automatically logged in to -# the desktop environment on boot. -# Disable when your Distribution does not require such a group. -# autologinGroup: autologin -# You can control the initial state for the 'autologin checkbox' here. -# Possible values are: -# - true to check or -# - false to uncheck -# These set the **initial** state of the checkbox. doAutologin: true -# When *sudoersGroup* is set to a non-empty string, Calamares creates a -# sudoers file for the user. This file is located at: -# `/etc/sudoers.d/10-installer` -# Remember to add the (value of) *sudoersGroup* to *defaultGroups*. -# -# If your Distribution already sets up a group of sudoers in its packaging, -# remove this setting (delete or comment out the line below). Otherwise, -# the setting will be duplicated in the `/etc/sudoers.d/10-installer` file, -# potentially confusing users. -# sudoersGroup: wheel - -# Setting this to false, causes the root account to be disabled. -# When disabled, hides the "Use the same password for administrator" -# checkbox. Also hides the "Choose a password" and associated text-inputs. setRootPassword: true -# You can control the initial state for the 'reuse password for root' -# checkbox here. Possible values are: -# - true to check or -# - false to uncheck -# -# When checked, the user password is used for the root account too. -# -# NOTE: *doReusePassword* requires *setRootPassword* to be enabled. doReusePassword: false -# These are optional password-requirements that a distro can enforce -# on the user. The values given in this sample file set only very weak -# validation settings. -# -# - nonempty rejects empty passwords -# - there are no length validations -# - libpwquality (if it is enabled at all) has no length of class -# restrictions, although it will still reject palindromes and -# dictionary words with these settings. -# -# Checks may be listed multiple times; each is checked separately, -# and no effort is done to ensure that the checks are consistent -# (e.g. specifying a maximum length less than the minimum length -# will annoy users). -# -# The libpwquality check relies on the (optional) libpwquality library. -# Its value is a list of configuration statements that could also -# be found in pwquality.conf, and these are handed off to the -# libpwquality parser for evaluation. The check is ignored if -# libpwquality is not available at build time (generates a warning in -# the log). The Calamares password check rejects passwords with a -# score of < 40 with the given libpwquality settings. -# -# (additional checks may be implemented in CheckPWQuality.cpp and -# wired into UsersPage.cpp) -# -# - To disable specific password validations: -# comment out the relevant 'passwordRequirements' keys below. -# - To disable all password validations: -# set both 'allowWeakPasswords' and 'allowWeakPasswordsDefault' to true. -# (That will show the box *Allow weak passwords* in the user- -# interface, and check it by default). -# passwordRequirements: -# nonempty: true -# minLength: -1 # Password at least this many characters -# maxLength: -1 # Password at most this many characters -# libpwquality: -# - minlen=0 -# - minclass=0 - -# You can control the visibility of the 'strong passwords' checkbox here. -# Possible values are: -# - true to show or -# - false to hide (default) -# the checkbox. This checkbox allows the user to choose to disable -# password-strength-checks. By default the box is **hidden**, so -# that you have to pick a password that satisfies the checks. allowWeakPasswords: true -# You can control the initial state for the 'strong passwords' checkbox here. -# Possible values are: -# - true to uncheck or -# - false to check (default) -# the checkbox by default. Since the box is labeled to enforce strong -# passwords, in order to **allow** weak ones by default, the box needs -# to be unchecked. allowWeakPasswordsDefault: true -# Shell to be used for the regular user of the target system. -# There are three possible kinds of settings: -# - unset (i.e. commented out, the default), act as if set to /bin/bash -# - empty (explicit), don't pass shell information to useradd at all -# and rely on a correct configuration file in /etc/default/useradd -# - set, non-empty, use that path as shell. No validation is done -# that the shell actually exists or is executable. -# userShell: /bin/bash - -# Hostname setting -# -# The user can enter a hostname; this is configured into the system -# in some way; pick one of: -# - *None*, to not set the hostname at all -# - *EtcFile*, to write to `/etc/hostname` directly -# - *Hostnamed*, to use systemd hostnamed(1) over DBus -# The default is *EtcFile*. setHostname: EtcFile - -# Should /etc/hosts be written with a hostname for this machine -# (also adds localhost and some ipv6 standard entries). writeHostsFile: true |