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Use Knoppix to reset forgotten Linux passwords . If you have forgotten a user's password under Linux and you have root access, you don't usually need a rescue disk because you can reset the password with the root account. Even if you have forgotten the root password, most Linux distributions let you log in to single- user mode (add the single or init=1 argument to the kernel at the boot prompt) and change the password from the root account. A paranoid system administrator might password-protect or disable single-user mode altogether in /etc/inittab , but you can still get to a root prompt to reset the password if you pass init=/bin/sh to the kernel when you boot. However, if the boot loader itself is password-protected and you forgot the password, you must have some sort of rescue disk to reset the password both in the boot loader (reference [Hack #2] or [Hack #53] for steps to reconfigure the boot loader) and in the /etc/passwd file. It is simple to reset a password in Linux, and to reset a password with Knoppix requires just one extra step. Boot the Knoppix CD and mount your Linux system with read/write permissions: knoppix@ttyp0[knoppix ]$ sudo mount -o rw /dev/hda1 /mnt/hda1 Replace hda1 with your root partition. Now run passwd under chroot , so that the passwd command changes the root password for the mounted system, and not Knoppix: knoppix@ttyp0[knoppix]$ sudo chroot /mnt/hda1 passwd Enter new UNIX password: Retype new UNIX password: passwd: password updated successfully knoppix@ttyp0[knoppix]$ To change the password for a user instead or root, invoke the same command but add the name of the user to the end: knoppix@ttyp0[knoppix]$ sudo chroot /mnt/hda1 passwd username Enter new UNIX password: Retype new UNIX password: passwd: password updated successfully knoppix@ttyp0[knoppix]$ With the password set to a new value, reboot and get back into your system. |
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