86 lines
3.4 KiB
Plaintext
86 lines
3.4 KiB
Plaintext
# Configuration for the one-user-system user module.
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#
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# Besides these settings, the user module also places the following
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# keys into the globalconfig area, based on user input in the view step.
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#
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# - hostname
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# - username
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# - password (obscured)
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# - autologinUser (if enabled, set to username)
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#
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# These globalconfig keys are set when the jobs for this module
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# are created.
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---
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# Used as default groups for the created user.
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# Adjust to your Distribution defaults.
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defaultGroups:
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- users
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- lp
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- video
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- network
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- storage
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- wheel
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- audio
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# Some Distributions require a 'autologin' group for the user.
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# Autologin causes a user to become automatically logged in to
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# the desktop environment on boot.
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# Disable when your Distribution does not require such a group.
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autologinGroup: autologin
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# You can control the initial state for the 'autologin checkbox' in UsersViewStep here.
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# Possible values are: true to enable or false to disable the checkbox by default
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doAutologin: true
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# When set to a non-empty string, Calamares creates a sudoers file for the user.
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# /etc/sudoers.d/10-installer
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# Remember to add sudoersGroup to defaultGroups.
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#
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# If your Distribution already sets up a group of sudoers in its packaging,
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# remove this setting (delete or comment out the line below). Otherwise,
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# the setting will be duplicated in the /etc/sudoers.d/10-installer file,
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# potentially confusing users.
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sudoersGroup: wheel
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# Setting this to false , causes the root account to be disabled.
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setRootPassword: true
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# You can control the initial state for the 'root password checkbox' in UsersViewStep here.
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# Possible values are: true to enable or false to disable the checkbox by default.
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# When enabled the user password is used for the root account too.
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# NOTE: doReusePassword requires setRootPassword to be enabled.
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doReusePassword: true
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# These are optional password-requirements that a distro can enforce
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# on the user. The values given in this sample file disable each check,
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# as if the check was not listed at all.
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#
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# Checks may be listed multiple times; each is checked separately,
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# and no effort is done to ensure that the checks are consistent
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# (e.g. specifying a maximum length less than the minimum length
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# will annoy users).
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#
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# The libpwquality check relies on the (optional) libpwquality library.
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# Its value is a list of configuration statements that could also
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# be found in pwquality.conf, and these are handed off to the
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# libpwquality parser for evaluation. The check is ignored if
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# libpwquality is not available at build time (generates a warning in
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# the log). The Calamares password check rejects passwords with a
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# score of < 40 with the given libpwquality settings.
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#
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# (additional checks may be implemented in CheckPWQuality.cpp and
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# wired into UsersPage.cpp)
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passwordRequirements:
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minLength: -1 # Password at least this many characters
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maxLength: -1 # Password at most this many characters
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libpwquality:
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- minlen=0
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- minclass=0
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# Shell to be used for the regular user of the target system.
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# There are three possible kinds of settings:
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# - unset (i.e. commented out, the default), act as if set to /bin/bash
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# - empty (explicit), don't pass shell information to useradd at all
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# and rely on a correct configuration file in /etc/default/useradd
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# - set, non-empty, use that path as shell. No validation is done
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# that the shell actually exists or is executable.
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# userShell: /bin/bash
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