Anaconda Kickstart Documentation¶
Authors: | Brian C. Lane <bcl@redhat.com> |
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Anaconda uses kickstart to automate installation and as a data store for the user interface. It also extends the kickstart commands documented here by adding a new kickstart section named %anaconda where commands to control the behavior of Anaconda will be defined.
pwpolicy¶
program: pwpolicy <name> [--minlen=LENGTH] [--minquality=QUALITY] [--strict|notstrict] [--emptyok|notempty] [--changesok|nochanges]
Set the policy to use for the named password entry.
name
- Name of the password entry, currently supported values are: root, user and luks
--minlen
(8)- Minimum password length. This is passed on to libpwquality.
--minquality
(50)- Minimum libpwquality to consider good. When using –strict it will not allow passwords with a quality lower than this.
--strict
(DEFAULT)- Strict password enforcement. Passwords not meeting the –minquality level will not be allowed.
--notstrict
- Passwords not meeting the –minquality level will be allowed after Done is clicked twice.
--emptyok
(DEFAULT)- Allow empty password.
--notempty
- Don’t allow an empty password
--changesok
- Allow UI to be used to change the password/user when it has already been set in the kickstart.
--nochanges
(DEFAULT)- Do not allow UI to be used to change the password/user if it has been set in the kickstart.
The defaults for these are set in the /usr/share/anaconda/interactive-defaults.ks file provided by Anaconda. If a product, such as Fedora Workstation, wishes to override them then a product.img needs to be created with a new version of the file included.
When using a kickstart the defaults can be overridded by placing a %anaconda section into the kickstart, like this:
%anaconda
pwpolicy root --minlen=10 --minquality=60 --strict --notempty --nochanges
%end
Note
The commit message for pwpolicy included some incorrect examples.