pavement

Administrator

From FreeBSDwiki
(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 16: Line 16:
 
</pre>
 
</pre>
  
'''Will remove all files on your system, including system ones, without asking for your confirmation. DO NOT RUN THIS COMMAND ON A SYSTEM YOU CARE ABOUT!!'''
+
'''DO NOT RUN THIS COMMAND ON A SYSTEM YOU CARE ABOUT!!  It will remove ALL files on your system, including system ones, without asking for your confirmation.'''
  
 
Remember: ''"With great power comes great responsibility."''
 
Remember: ''"With great power comes great responsibility."''

Revision as of 14:53, 11 September 2007

The Administrator is a user account typically found on Microsoft Windows platforms based on Windows NT, including desktop operating systems Windows 2000, XP and Vista and the server platforms NT 4.0 Server, Windows Server 2000 and Windows 2003 Server (and variants). It is the "super-user" account typically used by IT systems personnel to maintain these operating systems.

On FreeBSD and other UNIX and Unix-alike platforms (including Linux) the equivalent to the Administrator account is the root account. This is the "super-user" of Unix and is similarly used by IT systems personnel.

The two super-user accounts are similar in that they exist as part of the default installation and give top-level access to the operating system.

On Microsoft platforms regular user accounts can be given Administrator privileges where-as on Unix platforms a regular user must be given rights to issue the su command to elevate to the root account.

Important Warning

There are absolutely no system processes more privileged than root and there is no restriction on what root can do on a FreeBSD system. Running the following command as root:

unixbox# cd /
unixbox# rm -r *

DO NOT RUN THIS COMMAND ON A SYSTEM YOU CARE ABOUT!! It will remove ALL files on your system, including system ones, without asking for your confirmation.

Remember: "With great power comes great responsibility."


On unix systems, the init process is the "root" process and all other processes can be considered "child" processes of it. As root, you can change the init status of your system.

Personal tools