On Fri, Mar 2, 2012 at 8:42 AM, Greg Swift <xaeth(a)fedoraproject.org> wrote:
On Fri, Mar 2, 2012 at 05:36, Nikos Roussos
<nikos(a)autoverse.net> wrote:
>
> Here is a weird example of how Fedora currenty handles some permission
> procedures. I created a standard user account (no admin rights) and I'm
> trying to install a package. When I press apply I'm prompted to enter a
> password. Since I have no admin rights I would expect to be asked for the
> root password. Instead of that I'm asked to enter a password of another user
> who happens to be in the administrative group!
>
> See the screenshot as a proof:
>
http://s.autoverse.net/yYi6AF
> See on the top right corner that I'm logged in with another account.
>
> So in the UX level we have actually disabled the root account (I can
> remember when was the last time I was prompted to enter it) thus we keep
> asking for a root password during installation that's ends up confusing
> people about its purpose.
>
>
> PS. an interesting question: if I had two users on my system belonging to
> the administrative group. which one's password I'll be prompted to enter
> when I'm logged with a standard user account, like the example above.
>
I experience a similar scenario. On my home system (f16) I have my wife and
both in the wheel group. Every time I go to run virt-manager I get prompted
for her password. I do believe she is first in the wheel group after root
in /etc/group. However this doesn't make any sense to me. It makes more
sense for users that need that level of access to all know the root password
rather than the users to know another user's password. Even then, if I am
in the same group, doesn't it make more since to either prompt for my own
password or just allow me? We know each others password so i've always
shrugged it off cause I'm looking at other issues the few times when I am
playing with the virtuals at home but since someone brought it up...
This sub-thread seems to have gotten dropped but I was hoping for a
Fedora admin type to pipe and say, "Hmm... That shouldn't happen.."
I ran into this on my wife's laptop where I created my account first
to keep the UID/GID's consistent across our systems but when I added
her account I did mark it as an admin account, yet each time it
prompts her for my password, not hers.
Richard