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submitted 9 months ago by misk@sopuli.xyz to c/technology@lemmy.world
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[-] NegentropicBoy@lemmy.world 1 points 9 months ago

I moved to Fedora (KDE Plasma) about a year ago. I had researched alternatives for all I needed.

I installed it on a new machine and kept an old windows machine running.

It took a month or so to get things how I liked.

I miss some things in Windows but found some real time saving features in linux, on the whole I am better off.

And I feel a whole lot safer.

[-] Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca 0 points 9 months ago

Side question:

Know a good place I can learn linux user/group/permission management?

I don't understand it well enough so I do a stupid amount of things as root...

[-] 4am@lemm.ee 0 points 9 months ago

A good start is using something like sudo rather than logging in as root.

sudo gives your command root permission when it runs. That way you can delete the password from the root account and it can’t be logged in with. sudo will ask for YOUR password and then check if you have permissions to elevate your command to root level.

In a simple setup, you can just use for anything you would normally do as root.

This can protect you from mistakes too, when running commands that you’ve mistyped. For example, if you want to do “rm -rf ./*” to delete all files in the current directory, but you forget the dot (period); if you’re at a root prompt, you just deleted your entire filesystem. If you’re not, then you get a permission error.

[-] Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca 0 points 9 months ago

How do I manage what users can use sudo?

One issue is trying to create a user to run services under, but not knowing how to give it permission to access what it needs (while also not entirely sure what it should/shouldn't have permissions for).

Or just generally managing file permissions. I understand using chmod in a very basic capacity with a few letter arguments like +r, but then you toss in numbers (chmod 777, wut?) and I get lost.

[-] 4am@lemm.ee 0 points 9 months ago

In addition to what other posters said, some distros allow you to add a user to the “sudo” group (as a secondary group assignment; don’t make it their primary) to allow them sudo access.

Edit your /ect/sudoers file using visudo

this post was submitted on 29 Jan 2024
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