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| How to go from four users to one? Title says it all. I would like to know to prevent orphaned or unreachable files if I simply delete the users. Thanks for any help, Ted |
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| Re: How to go from four users to one? If you delete the users from the Accounts prefpane, their user directories are either enclosed in a disk image, or deleted outright. There are no orphaned files associated directly with their accounts. |
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| Re: How to go from four users to one? Quote:
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| Re: How to go from four users to one? If you delete a user's account via the Account Prefpane, (depending on which course you choose): 1) Their home directory (/Users/foo/) is put into a disk image and that disk image is moved to /Users/Deleted Users/, subsequently, their home directory (/Users/foo/) is deleted. This preserves the data on a disk image in case you ever have to go back for information in their home directory. OR 2) If you choose "Delete Immediately", then their home directory (/Users/foo/) is immediately deleted. Make more sense? |
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| Re: How to go from four users to one? I deleted the user in question, but the dialogue box didn't explicitly say that all their data and files would be deleted. Now I have a very angry spouse. Is there some way to recover that data? |
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| Re: How to go from four users to one? 1) What version of OS X are you running? 2) I'm confused, weren't you trying to delete a user and remove their requisite information? Why are you now asking to restore data? 3) Assuming you're running Panther, which selection did you choose when you deleted the users? The "OK" button or "Delete Immediately" button? |
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| Re: How to go from four users to one? Quote:
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| Re: How to go from four users to one? Panther is 10.3.x My earlier post told you what the "Delete Immediately" button did. Quote:
Renaming a shortname of an account is always a bad idea if you don't know what you're doing. Sounds like what you need is a backup solution. That way you could have easily recovered from all this. Cloning your boot disk to an external firewire hard drive is an inexpensive backup solution. Using a low-cost product like Carbon Copy Cloner or SuperDuper, you can automate a backup that will copy all data from your boot device to another device (firewire drives might be easiest for you). This copy will be bootable, so if everything on your boot device gets fried, you can always fall back to the copy. Naturally, this system isn't infallible and you should do some research first, but everyone needs a backup solution. |
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