This was on a CyberGuard LX firewall, running version 4.2 BSD
Luckily I did know one user name and it had no password.
cgadmin
Using the boot CD, pick option 4 for single use mode
going through the country and keyboard
going to the repair mode with CDROM/DVD option off the install menu,
using the "live" CDROM filesystem gave me a root prompt Fixit#
now mounting the hard drive, in my case /dev/ad0s3a
mount /dev/ad0s3a /mnt
now edit the master password file
vi /mnt/etc/master.passwd
on the root line, delete all characters between the first two :: to remove
the root password altogether.
hence ending up with
root::0:0::00:Charlie &:/root:/bin/csh or something similar
save the file
now change permissions, but look at them first, make a note so you can put
them back to the correct setting later
chmod 777 /mnt/etc
chmod 666 /mnt/etc/master.passwd
reboot
remove the CD and reboot the original system.
For some reason my older FreeBSD version 4.3 filesystem did not like being
mounted onto a FreeBSD 6.1 install CD
Hence on reboot it made me do a manual fsck
Then another reboot
Now login as a user, cgadmin in my case
get a prompt and run
pwd_mkdb /etc/master.passwd
This rebuilds the secure password database
Now get another getty - say Alt-F4 and login as root
Amazing!!!!
Reboot if you like, set yourself a new root password and write it down this
time
I prefer a label on the bottom of the box, because if you have got this
access, you can crack the password.
Now don't forget to set the file security back to where it was
chmod 755 /etc
chmod 600 /etc/master.passwd
Hope you enjoyed the day.
Derek
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You don't need to know another account nor do you need all those other step=
s. After you edit the /etc/master.passwd file by booting from the fixit CD =
simply:
pwd_mkdb -d /mnt/etc master.passwd
If pwd_mkdb is not on the fixit CD -- I don't remember if it is -- you can =
run it from your hard drive something like this, depending on what partitio=
n it's on:
/mnt/usr/sbin/pwd_mkdb -d /mnt/etc master.passwd
Then just reboot and log in as root.
David
I am confused why this topic came up on this list..
-Garrett
Try: vipw -d /mnt/etc
It automaticly updates the right db(s)
Futher reading: man 8 vipw
/Soeren
--
Soeren Straarup | aka OZ2DAK aka Xride
FreeBSD committer | FreeBSD since 2.2.6-R
If a program is not working right, then send a patch
> David S. Madole wrote:
>>> From Derekj Tourneo on Friday, March 16, 2007 4:46 PM
>>>
>>> How I recovered a lost root password in FreeBSD
>>>
>>> Luckily I did know one user name and it had no password. cgadmin going to
>>> the repair mode with CDROM/DVD option off the install menu, using the
>>> "live" CDROM filesystem gave me a root prompt Fixit#
>
> I am confused why this topic came up on this list..
Because it is a way to hack BSD, obviously. :-)
(It's gotten less frequent, but it used to be that once every few months an
e-mail would turn up on the list asking about how to hack FreeBSD systems...)
Robert N M Watson
Computer Laboratory
University of Cambridge
# chroot /mnt passwd root
--
Matthew Fuller (MF4839) | full...@over-yonder.net
Systems/Network Administrator | http://www.over-yonder.net/~fullermd/
On the Internet, nobody can hear you scream.