I've got a NCR Tower 32/500 (3466-500) running
Unix that has a mixed-up
root password- see, I got it in working condition, with no password on
root. Like a dolt, I changed the password before setting up an account
for myself. It happily took the password, and I did an orderly shutdown.
Later, I re-started and went to log in, and it kept coming up with 'login
incorrect'. I did a disorderly shutdown (no way to log in to do it right)
and now it comes up in single-user mode saying it needs to be fsck'ed (no
problem), but it still wants a password. I've tried every convolution
of the password I used (it was a simple word, a numeral, and the # sign)
with no luck. I do not know any other accounts/passwords, nor do I have a
system install tape. Is there any way to get in without a password and
edit the /etc/.passwd file?
Richard
The # sign is the problem...I'll bet. Some AT&T Unix's used to use
that as a special delete character. Try using a backslash \
before the pound sign.
Bill
---
bpechter@shell.monmouth.com|pechter@pechter.dyndns.org
Three things never anger: First, the one who runs your DEC,
The one who does Field Service and the one who signs your check.