hjp-pg...@hjp.at wrote:
> 
>> b...@yugabyte.com wrote:
>> 
>> However, Linux (at least) simply disallows O/S users that have a dollar sign 
>> in the name.
> 
> This is getting quite off-topic, but that isn't true:
> 
> trintignant:~ 22:46 :-) 1015# useradd -m -s /bin/bash 'mac$crooge'
> trintignant:~ 22:46 :-) 1016# su - 'mac$crooge'
> mac@trintignant:~$ id
> uid=1002(mac$crooge) gid=1003(mac$crooge) groups=1003(mac$crooge)
> mac@trintignant:~$
> 
> I'm not saying that doing this is a good idea ...

This is what I see. I have Ubuntu 20.04 LTS VM using Parallels Desktop Version 
18.

# adduser 'dog$house'
adduser: To avoid problems, the username should consist only of
letters, digits, underscores, periods, at signs and dashes, and not start with
a dash (as defined by IEEE Std 1003.1-2001). For compatibility with Samba
machine accounts $ is also supported at the end of the username

I tried your longer version verbatim:

useradd -m -s /bin/bash 'mac$crooge'

and that quietly succeeded. I'd left out "-m" and "-s" because, for an ordinary 
username, I get the home directory that I want and the (bash) shell that I want 
without explicitly asking for these.

It's bizarre that, merely by being explicit about these two fact, I'm now 
allowed to have a name with a dollar-sign—notwithstanding what the text of the 
earlier error message claimed. I wondered if that it wasn't an error message at 
all—and was just a warning. But "cat /etc/passwd" showed me that "dog$house" 
had not been created while "mac$crooge" HAD been.

So I've leaned something about yet another Linux weirdness.

However, now that I know what I know from what contributors to this thread have 
told me, I'll stick with plain "clstr_mgr" for the O/S user and use the 
"clstr$mgr" spelling just for the cluster role. It's a mild nuisance having to 
enquote this when it's the argument of psql's "-U" option, and in the config 
files. But I can live with that.

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