On 4/9/21 10:31 AM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
On 4/9/21 5:18 AM, Steve Clark via CentOS wrote:
On 4/8/21 3:50 PM, Tony Schreiner wrote:
On Thu, Apr 8, 2021 at 2:33 PM Nicolas Kovacs info@microlinux.frmailto:info@microlinux.fr wrote:
Le 08/04/2021 à 18:58, Steve Clark via CentOS a écrit :
How do I allow root log in on GDM.
tl;dr: you don't.
Log in as a non-root user, and when you do need root, either open up a terminal and use 'su -' or (even better) setup your user by making your user a member of the wheel group and then use sudo.
Logging in to a GUI as root is *BAD* practice.
Cheers,
Niki
That said - you can do it, by clicking on "Not listed?" and typing root into the user field.
Yes I have done that and it immediately comes back to the login screen, I know I am typing the correct passwd, because if I botch the passwd I get a message to that effect.
I would not recommend ever using the GUI as the root user .. it creates keys and items that are very dangerous. (gnome key rings, etc)
+1000
You should be able to 'su -' , then use visudo to create a sudo account for your user. You can even NOPASSWD your user for using sudo (you may or may not want to do that .. if someone gains access to your local account, they could then sudo with no passwd).
In the past I even avoided sudo. It yet one more SUID-ed binary on your machine. Which may add to your potential [local, in general] vulnerability footprint. su, - making yourself root is more than enough for regular sysadmin.
But, i have never, ever logged in as root on a GUI account directly on a machine that I cared about or was keeping live .. just advise, do with it what you will.
+1
To OP: Do as you wish, and deal with consequences.
Valeri
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