These are administrative commands which affect your account, status, or rights.
Passwords should be changed at irregular (unguessable) intervals. Never use short or guessable passwords: the best advice is here.
Type the passwd command. It will ask for your existing password first, to make sure it really is you and not someone borrowing your account; and it will then ask for a new password, and then ask you to repeat the new password:
$ passwd Changing password for ontology (current) UNIX password: New UNIX password: Repeat new UNIX password: $
The password is not shown as you type, not even with asterisks or bullets, so take care (that underlining is just to show in this example you where you type: the underlining does not actually appear when you type the password). If you get the repeat wrong, it will ask for the new password again. You can abort the process and leave the password unchanged by typing a Ctrl+D twice.
Passwords usually have a fixed lifetime, determined by your systems administrator. You can find out how long your password has left before it expires with the chage command:
Type the chage command with the -l option (a lowercase ell) and your account name:
$ chage -l ontology Last password change : Nov 10, 2011 Password expires : Mar 22, 2012 Password inactive : Dec 31, 2012 Account expires : Dec 31, 2099 Minimum number of days between password change : 10 Maximum number of days between password change : 90 Number of days of warning before password expires : 10, 5/4/3/2/1 $
Changing your password at unpredictable intervals is a good contribution to account security.
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Electronic Publishing Unit • 2008-11-19 • (other) |