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My first post. Brilliant distro by the way!
Is there any advice on cleaning up after a migration from Debian? I noticed a few users in the /etc/passwd file with _that_ name. Should I remove them and what other things might I need to do?
systemd-timesync:x:117:126:systemd Time Synchronization,,,:/run/systemd:/bin/false
systemd-network:x:118:127:systemd Network Management,,,:/run/systemd/netif:/bin/false
systemd-resolve:x:119:128:systemd Resolver,,,:/run/systemd/resolve:/bin/false
systemd-bus-proxy:x:120:129:systemd Bus Proxy,,,:/run/systemd:/bin/false
gcla
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You didn't say what you migrated from/to. Did you follow these basic instructions? Each release might require some slightly different procedures.
https://devuan.org/os/documentation/dev … -to-jessie
https://devuan.org/os/documentation/dev … e-to-ascii
Please also read this thread:
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Thanks for the reply. I migrated from Debian 8 to Devuan 1.0 and I followed the guide on the Devuan site. I've since upgrade Devuan 1.0 to ascii. My query was regarding systemd users and groups following a migration from Debian. I have done a clean install on another machine and it doesn't have these users. If they are not a problem I will leave them there.
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As a matter of traditional system security, any users that you are not using should be removed. The fact that these accounts all have /bin/false for the shell leads one to infer that those would never log in, so it probably comes down to file ownership.
You could find any files (particularly in /dev) owned by any of those users.
find / \( -user 117 -o -user 118 -o -user 119 -o -user 120 \) -print
I don't expect any devices to actually be owned by those users, because /dev is populated at boot and sysvinit probably doesn't go around using systemd* users. But that's why you check. For me, it was a little interesting that debian derivatives use lots of local groups to control devices, which makes using domain users on laptops difficult.
Edit:
Or running daemons. But if you're running systemd daemons of some sort underneath sysvinit, uh, we will find ways to help you!
Last edited by bgstack15 (2019-09-17 19:58:15)
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I thought there was a command in dev1fanboy's instructions to remove systemd cruft.
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Thank you all. Ran the find command and nothing showed up so deleted the four users. All cleaned up and no issues.
I followed the guide here
https://devuan.org/os/documentation/dev … e-to-ascii
which doesn't appear to deal specifically with systemd created users.
Cheers,
gcla
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Happy to hear that worked for you!
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