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Linux Mint Essentials

You're reading from   Linux Mint Essentials A practical guide to Linux Mint for the novice to the professional

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2014
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782168157
Length 324 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Jay LaCroix Jay LaCroix
Author Profile Icon Jay LaCroix
Jay LaCroix
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Meet Linux Mint FREE CHAPTER 2. Creating Boot Media and Installing Linux Mint 3. Getting Acquainted with Cinnamon 4. An Introduction to the Terminal 5. Utilizing Storage and Media 6. Installing and Removing Software 7. Enjoying Multimedia on Mint 8. Managing Users and Permissions 9. Connecting to Networks 10. Securing Linux Mint 11. Advanced Administration Techniques 12. Troubleshooting Linux Mint A. Reinstalling Mint while Retaining Data B. Using the MATE Edition of Linux Mint C. Using the KDE Edition of Linux Mint Index

Changing passwords


With the Users and Groups tool, changing passwords is easy. In the preceding section, we discussed how to set a password for a user while creating a new account. To change the password for a user, simply go through the process again by clicking on the text next to Password, and then you type in the new password; that's it!

On the shell, the passwd command allows a user to change their own password. In fact, a user can even change their own password via the GUI by accessing System Settings and then Account Details, so using a terminal command such as passwd isn't required. However, the passwd command can also allow administrators to change the passwords of other users as well.

Although we'll discuss sudo in more detail later in this chapter, the sudo command allows you to run a command as an administrator, provided you are a member of the sudo group. If you execute the sudo passwd command, followed by a username, you can change the password for any user you like (even if...

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