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Date:      Mon, 4 May 2009 14:39:34 -0400
From:      "illoai@gmail.com" <illoai@gmail.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org, crankbuster@gmail.com
Subject:   Re: Questions about groups.
Message-ID:  <d7195cff0905041139m1ee4eb86yea534b7be3d82d24@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <20090504141834.GA5348@gecko.davescrunch.net>
References:  <20090504141834.GA5348@gecko.davescrunch.net>

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2009/5/4 Old Crankbuster <crankbuster@gmail.com>:
>
> Coming from Gnu/Linux, I see differences in group generation on regular
> user generation, and there's a group I'm not familiar with - 'operator'.
>
> What does that one do?

Members of "operator" can run /sbin/shutdown among
other things.
find / -group operator
can answer better than I ever could.

>
> I'm familiar with 'staff' and I've added my normal user to that, and of
> course 'wheel'.
>
> I intend to use the system on a laptop in this case, and need to enable
> regular user access to audio, cdrom/dvd read and write, usb access, and
> network reconfiguration/dialout, games and so forth.
>
> I am not seeing such things as plugdev,audio,cdrom in etc/group after
> initial install.
>
> Do I need to manually add such groups and then point relevant packages
> to them?
>

Various methods apply (for instance /dev/dspN.n is world
writable), man 5 devfs.conf is a good start for some of that.

Best of luck.

-- 
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