Sysadmin/Add shell account

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Revision as of 21:23, 2 December 2010 by Bernie (talk | contribs)
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Users normally do follow the Sysadmin/Shell account request. The account requests arrive to a support queue on our RT system (Machine/treehouse/rt).

Guidelines

Users should briefly motivate their request. "I'd like to distribute some Sugar-related files on people.sugarlabs.org" would suffice.

Shell accounts shouldn't be granted to untrusted individuals without referrals. Shell accounts that are known to be unused should be disabled.

Account creation

To create an account, become root on sunjammer and type:

system-useradd <username> <first_name> <last_name> <email>

At some point, the script will prompt you to paste the user's ssh key. You can skip this part and edit ~user/.ssh/authorized_keys manually.

The procedure automatically sends a welcome email to the user. The email is also copied to ~user/welcome, in case they loose the original message.

Passwords

The users are supposed to update their password by going to

https://ldap.sugarlabs.org/passwd

Password logins are not permitted on any of our machines. The password is used by other authentication protocols: HTTP, IMAP, SMTP...

We currently don't have single-sign-on on most of our web applications, but users can use our OpenID provider (id.sugarlabs.org).


Removing shell accounts

Use:

system-userdel <user>

Groups

To add groups:

system-groupadd

To remove groups, there's no script. Simply use "ldapvi" with no arguments.

User information changes

Use ldapvi directly


Password reset

If the users have forgotten their password, you can hack the password information manually with ldapvi. Alternatively, go to the password web form and type sunjammer's root password in place of the user's old password.

If the user knows how to use GPG, send them the new password encrypted. In any case, ask them to change it immediately.

See also