On 2019-05-14 09:07, Bee.Lists wrote:
On May 14, 2019, at 8:14 AM, Jonathan Billings billings@negate.org wrote:
On Tue, May 14, 2019 at 07:45:55AM -0400, Bee.Lists wrote:
I addressed this in the thread.
And we continue to tell you that you're wrong. su behaves the same way when switching to any other user as it does for root. Stop spreading misinformation.
Not big on reading what I put. It’s all there. Regardless how often you say ‘su’ is the same as ‘su fred’, it is not. Stop spreading misinformation.
Look, in the following four command lines executed in the shell:
su
su fred
su - fred
su -l fred
- in all four of them:
"su" is a command
"fred" is an argument (wherever it is present)
"-" (surrounded by spaces on both sides) and "-l" are command options
This is standard terminology used in UNIX, Linux, etc for several decades. And finally, RTFM, please.
And also, can we close this thread, please.
Valeri
Cheers, Bee
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