On 03/05/2018 06:30 PM, Bill Shirley wrote:
> I've done this many times but always from root.

I've not tried it for this sort of thing, but "sudo bash -l" SHOULD make
a non-root user behave as root (including root's environment).

> With no root account, I would:
> 1) create a 2nd user 'test', set a password, and make 'test' a sudo user
> 2) logout and login as 'test'
> 3) let's say the user to change is 'bob' with id 1000
>   grep bob /etc/passwd
>   should yield:
>     bob:x:1000:1000:Bob:/home/bob:/bin/bash
> 4) edit /etc/passwd and change the 1st number (the uid) for 'bob' from
> 1000 to 54321 and save
> 5) run:
>   sudo find / -xdev -uid 1000 -exec chown bob {} \;
>   -xdev says stay on this filesystem; don't descend into /proc or /sys
> or /cdrom and so on.
>   This could take awhile.
> 6) logout from 'test' and login as 'bob'

Don't forget that many people have /home as a separate filesystem, so
an additional "find /home -xdev -uid 1000 -exec chown bob {} \;"
wouldn't be out of place. Perhaps superfluous, perhaps very necessary.
Couldn't hurt. Belt and suspenders, don't you know.
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