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  2. Group identifier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_identifier

    Many system administrators allocate for each user also a personal primary group that has the same name as the user's login name, and often also has the same numeric GID as the user's UID. Such personal groups have no other members and make collaboration with other users in shared directories easier, by allowing users to habitually work with ...

  3. Wheel (computing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheel_(computing)

    The wheel group is a special user group used on some Unix systems, mostly BSD systems, [citation needed] to control access to the su [4] [5] or sudo command, which allows a user to masquerade as another user (usually the super user). [1] [2] [6] Debian and its derivatives create a group called sudo with purpose similar to that of a wheel group. [7]

  4. File-system permissions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File-system_permissions

    Some systems diverge from the traditional POSIX model of users and groups by creating a new group – a "user private group" – for each user. Assuming that each user is the only member of its user private group, this scheme allows an umask of 002 to be used without allowing other users to write to newly created files in normal directories ...

  5. sudo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudo

    After authentication, and if the configuration file permits the user access, the system invokes the requested command. sudo retains the user's invocation rights through a grace period (typically 5 minutes) per pseudo terminal, allowing the user to execute several successive commands as the requested user without having to provide a password again.

  6. User identifier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_identifier

    The UID, along with the group identifier (GID) and other access control criteria, is used to determine which system resources a user can access. The password file maps textual user names to UIDs. UIDs are stored in the inodes of the Unix file system , running processes, tar archives, and the now-obsolete Network Information Service.

  7. Superuser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superuser

    Remote users are unable to access the built-in administrator account. A Windows administrator account is not an exact analogue of the Unix root account – Administrator, the built-in administrator account, and a user administrator account have the same level of privileges. The default user account created in Windows systems is an administrator ...

  8. Delegated administration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delegated_administration

    Web-based group management tools — used for delegated administration — therefore provide the following capabilities using a directory as the group repository: Decentralized management of groups (roles) and access rights by business- or process-owners; Categorizing or segmenting users by characteristic, not by enumeration

  9. menuconfig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menuconfig

    The user is encouraged to read the Linux README, [1] since there are also many other make targets (beyond modules_install and install). Each will configure the kernel, but with different features activated, or using a different interactive interface; such as tinyconfig or allyesconfig.