Dear All,
I don't know the password of the only account of my iBook G4 that has OS 10.5.8.
There are several methods to bypass this problem.
One of them is to change
(All) All in passwd: all in the single user mode
as it's described here:
I think that I did the 5 first steps of the method and that there is only the 6th step to achieve.
I wrote 'I think', because I'm not sure though the changes (i.e. (All) All in passwd: all) that I made can be seen after I reboot.
I don't think that I used vi.
I only wrote
which is advised here:
Please how do you open a terminal before the login to do the 6th step?
I don't know the password of the only account of my iBook G4 that has OS 10.5.8.
There are several methods to bypass this problem.
One of them is to change
(All) All in passwd: all in the single user mode
as it's described here:
Mac OS X Tip - No Password, No Root, No CD? No Problem.
Say you’ve lost your account password, you don’t have a system CD on hand, and you didn’t enable root. Say you have no other way to log into that machine. Say you need access to the files on that machine right now. Say you’re in deep you-know-what, bucko. Fortunately, there’s a five minute fix — […]
www.macobserver.com
I think that I did the 5 first steps of the method and that there is only the 6th step to achieve.
I wrote 'I think', because I'm not sure though the changes (i.e. (All) All in passwd: all) that I made can be seen after I reboot.
I don't think that I used vi.
I only wrote
Code:
mount -uw /
sudo visudo
Pro Terminal Commands: How and Why To Edit Sudoers on macOS - Apple Gazette
Within your macOS system, there’s a file called “sudoers” which controls the deepest levels of your permissions system. This file says which users can run sudo, and what they can do when they run it. Basically, it decides who is in charge. We can edit sudoers on macOS to administer a multi-user...
www.applegazette.com
Please how do you open a terminal before the login to do the 6th step?