Score:0

Unable to login - need to boot into single user and recover password?

in flag

A week ago I installed Xubuntu (20.04?) on a Dell Latitude e6530 that had Windows 10 "ready to install" (I never agreed to MS terms, so didn't activate). I was the only user and had root access and (I'm assuming) superuser rights.

After installing Wine and Scribus and learning some how to navigate the system, I changed my password, set to No Password on Login, and noticing I wasn't an administrator, made myself one. I then closed lid (thinking that would put changes into effect - doh!), and once I opened lid, was prompted for a password, which was not accepted - neither the new one (which I uncharacteristically had written down) nor the old.

With help from Ask Ubuntu folks, I made it to the Grub (2.04) prompt to get into recovery mode. There I got stumped. Didn't know which to choose: Linux 5.4.0-96-generic or Linux 5.4.0-42-generic. The -96- appears to be more recent than my Xubuntu (if it indeed is 20.04 from April 2020). So I'm guessing I should edit the -42- one. [Dunno if using the wrong one will screw things up (even more).]

Once I get to the right recovery mode, and am presumably able to boot into single user mode, how do I recover my password, if that's what I need to do? And should I un-administrator myself?

Or perhaps I should cut my losses and reinstall the whole salami. After all, I don't understand most commands others have kindly offered; I don't think blindly following (anything or anyone) is a good idea.

Thank you one and all for your gracious support, including the (staffer?) who sent me a Yes/No query whether any of 16 suggestions had helped/resolved my issue. All I could answer is "not yet", but that wasn't an option, so I've been silent to that query so far.

guiverc avatar
cn flag
This would be easier if you were precise on release details; but the 5.4 kernel you mention IS the GA kernel for Ubuntu 20.04 LTS (Ubuntu LTS releases have two kernel stack choices; GA being one). The 5.4.0-42-generic kernel was likely what was on your installation media (it matches https://old-releases.ubuntu.com/releases/20.04.2/ubuntu-20.04-desktop-amd64.manifest), where as the 5.4.0-96 is with security patches applied likely obtained during upgrades during or post-installation. You can use either for fixing issues; -96 will be safer.
in flag
Thank you guiverc, that's helpful for my level of understanding. I'd be happy to be precise on release details if I knew them or how to find them. I only know that the USB drive I installed from only contains an efi directory with 3 files: bootx64.efi, grubx64.efi and mmx64.efi from 7/29/2020. I don't know whether that's the date the files were copied to the thumbdrive or a release date. That's why I speculated that I have Xubuntu 20.04. Do you think that's a safe assumption?
in flag
I thought I had effected a recovery after successfully changing the password at root@hulda-Latitude-E6530:~# But system didn't reboot on entering exec /sbin/init. Turning the laptop off didn't bring me a restored system, either. So I decided to cut my losses and reinstall.
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