/
omv-users.conf
71 lines (65 loc) · 2.28 KB
/
omv-users.conf
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
---
defaultGroups:
- users
- lp
- lpadmin
- video
- network
- storage
- wheel
- audio
- sambashare
# (crazy) NOTE: lp group changed meaning , blame Apple for that.
# first user need be in lpadmin group to be able to do anything with
# the cups setup from any GUI apps.
autologinGroup: autologin
doAutologin: false
sudoersGroup: wheel
setRootPassword: true
doReusePassword: false
# These are optional password-requirements that a distro can enforce
# on the user. The values given in this sample file disable each check,
# as if the check was not listed at all.
#
# Checks may be listed multiple times; each is checked separately,
# and no effort is done to ensure that the checks are consistent
# (e.g. specifying a maximum length less than the minimum length
# will annoy users).
#
# (additional checks may be implemented in UsersPage.cpp)
passwordRequirements:
minLength: -1 # Password at least this many characters
maxLength: -1 # Password at most this many characters
# libpwquality:
# - minlen=0
# - minclass=0
# You can control the visibility of the 'strong passwords' checkbox here.
# Possible values are:
# - true to show or
# - false to hide (default)
# the checkbox. This checkbox allows the user to choose to disable
# password-strength-checks. By default the box is **hidden**, so
# that you have to pick a password that satisfies the checks.
allowWeakPasswords: false
# You can control the initial state for the 'strong passwords' checkbox here.
# Possible values are:
# - true to uncheck or
# - false to check (default)
# the checkbox by default. Since the box is labeled to enforce strong
# passwords, in order to **allow** weak ones by default, the box needs
# to be unchecked.
allowWeakPasswordsDefault: false
# (crazy) FIXME: add UI options for that
userShell: /bin/bash
# Hostname setting
#
# The user can enter a hostname; this is configured into the system
# in some way; pick one of:
# - *None*, to not set the hostname at all
# - *EtcFile*, to write to `/etc/hostname` directly
# - *Hostnamed*, to use systemd hostnamed(1) over DBus
# The default is *EtcFile*.
setHostname: EtcFile
# Should /etc/hosts be written with a hostname for this machine
# (also adds localhost and some ipv6 standard entries).
writeHostsFile: true