On 11/09/2012 09:11 AM, "Jóhann B. Guðmundsson" wrote:
Well the argue can be made that If you are doing a minimal install it kinda indicates you actually know what you are doing ( which means you will probably change whatever was set afterwards ) so the system should just default to use sane working defaults which should come with the relevant package when it's installed even set some default password.
Pretty sure having a default root password in some package in Fedora is a non-starter.
The point of doing an (automated) install (which can be minimal, or at least start with minimal and build upon that with only exactly the needed functionality) is so that you can do the install unattended, reboot the machine and put it into production, unattended.
But if we continue to look at minimal install which post-install configuration files is Anaconda explicitly touching?
root auth and firewall config are the main ones. Note that we don't have any UI for firewall config either, so not really a lot of code duplication.
-- Jesse Keating Fedora -- Freedom² is a feature! -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel