![]() ![]() ![]() This configuration change has probably been made already as part of installing the Retrospect client software, but you may want to verify it anyway. If you use a firewall, the Retrospect server has to be allowed access to TCP and UDP port 497 on your computer. Since we don't recommend sending any passwords via e-mail, feel free to visit us in building 4, floor 1, to provide the necessary information. Your computer will then be given access to the server, and its first backup will be scheduled and run. It may work with newer client versions also.Īfter installing the client, leave your computer connected to the department network and notify the backup administrators with its name on the network (displayed when starting the client) and the client password you picked during the installation. Select a client for your OS (the client name must contain the word "Client"). Look under "Retrospect Archives" (far down on the page) and "Retrospect 7.7 for Windows" (which is our server version). When your system has booted back up you’ll be able to use the new root password.To use the backup service, you need a software client provided by EMC. Once the reboot has completed you will be able to use the root account with your newly set password.Īs shown we can reset the root password in Linux CentOS/RHEL 7 by booting with the ‘rd.break’ option, remounting the file system with read/write privileges, creating a chroot jail, executing the passwd command and then finally fixing up SELinux contexts.Īfter exiting the chroot and the initramfs root shell prompt the file system will be relabelled which may take a few minutes or more depending on the number of files you have. Enter the ‘exit’ command twice, the first one will exit the chroot jail environment while the second will exit the initramfs root shell and reboot the system. ![]() For a plain vanilla CentOS 7 server, it takes me about 2 minutes to complete. Note that this may take some time depending on the amount of files you have on the file system. Create the /.autorelabel command using ‘touch’.Ĭreating this file will automatically perform a relabel of all files on next boot. As SELinux is not running in this mode the file is created with no SELinux contexts, which can cause problems when we reboot. This is because when the ‘passwd’ command is run, it creates a new /etc/shadow file. If you’re not using SELinux, you could reboot at this point and everything would be fine, however by default CentOS/RHEL 7 use SELinux in enforcing mode, so we need to fix the context of the /etc/shadow file.From here the root password can be reset with the ‘passwd’ command.This is done by running ‘chroot /sysroot’. This is required so that any further commands we run will be in regards to /sysroot. Once the file system has been remounted, change into a chroot jail so that /sysroot is used as the root of the file system.This is done with the ‘mount -o remount,rw /sysroot’ command. At this stage, the root file system is mounted in read only mode to /sysroot and must be remounted with read/write (rw) permissions in order for us to actually make any changes.This will boot to the initramfs prompt with a root shell. Press “Ctrl+x” to boot with these options.Enter ‘rd.break’ without quotes at the end of this line, as shown below. From the grub options, find the line that starts with “linux16” and go to the end of it.At the boot menu, press the ‘e’ key to edit the first boot entry. If your Linux system is currently running, reboot it.As with all system maintenance tasks, be sure you have a system backup/snapshot prior to proceeding. This procedure will be completed in the console of the Linux system, so be sure that you have access to this prior to beginning. This is also a task that you will need to know how to perform for the RHCSA exam. From version 7 the equivalent modes are the rescue or emergency targets, however these require the root password before you can do anything which doesn’t help us here, so we’ll take you through the new process to change the lost root password. The process has changed from CentOS/RHEL (Red Hat Enterprise Linux) version 6 to 7, as previously you would boot into single user mode and then change the password as root. Normally resetting the root password is a simple task if you’re logged in already with root privileges, however if you forget the password and need to change it things become a little more difficult. ![]()
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