When i first set up my linux desktop it asked me to add a user account . After then i was learning linux commands using this account. I then add some more users using "useradd" command. Now i eager to known that is there any difference between first user account and those i created using 'useradd' command and how can i figure out those difference.
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no, there isn't– 炸鱼薯条德里克Dec 7, 2019 at 13:43
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2On some Unix systems (e.g. OpenBSD and macOS), the non-root account created via the initial installation may sometimes be a member of a "wheel", "staff", "admin", or similar group or login class. Depending on what Linux you use (you don't mention this), this may be true for you too. Are you having some sort of issue relating to this?– Kusalananda ♦Dec 7, 2019 at 13:50
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I have linux mint. I cant change some files with the second type of user account– play storeDec 7, 2019 at 15:53
1 Answer
Look into /etc/group
for whether the first account is in some groups that the second is not.
Look into /etc/sudoers
to see if it's individually mentioned as permitted to use sudo
, and either add an entry for the second user if so, or enable a group sudo permission for a group that your new account will be in, conventionally wheel
.
Also, you mentioned "you can't change some files" with it. Check the owner and group of those files (in ls -l
), and if you want both users to have equal access then set permissions on this file to ones allowing group the same as owner and have the files' group set to one that both users are in.