Home User

Home User

Home User

Linux is a powerful multi-user operating system. It can have many concurrent users accessing the system at the same time. The system admin can manage. 3.8.2. Requirements. User specific configuration files for applications are stored in the user's home directory in a file that starts with the '. It will be the home directory of the current logged in user. c:\Users\${current_user_name}. Home User

Home User - question think

Home directory

Directory to hold files for a specific user

A home directory is a file system directory on a multi-useroperating system containing files for a given user of the system. The specifics of the home directory (such as its name and location) are defined by the operating system involved; for example, Linux / BSD (FHS) systems use /home/⟨username⟩ and Windows systems between 2000 and Server 2003 keep home directories in a folder called Documents and Settings.

Description[edit]

A user's home directory is intended to contain that user's files; including text documents, music, pictures or videos, etc. It may also include their configuration files of preferred settings for any software they have used there and might have tailored to their liking: web browserbookmarks, favorite desktopwallpaper and themes, passwords to any external services accessed via a given software, etc. The user can install executable software in this directory, but it will only be available to users with permission to this directory. The home directory can be organized further with the use of sub-directories.

The content of a user's home directory is protected by file system permissions, and by default is accessible to all authenticated users and administrators. Any other user that has been granted administrator privileges has authority to access any protected location on the filesystem including other users home directories.

Benefits[edit]

Separating user data from system-wide data avoids redundancy and makes backups of important files relatively simple. Furthermore, Trojan horses, viruses and worms running under the user's name and with their privileges will in most cases only be able to alter the files in the user's home directory, and perhaps some files belonging to workgroups the user is a part of, but not actual system files.[citation needed]

Default home directory per operating system[edit]

Operating systemPathEnvironment variable
AT&T Unix (original version)
Unix-derived
Unix-based [1]
BSD / Linux (FHS)
SunOS / Solaris
macOS
Android
Microsoft Windows NT
Microsoft Windows 2000, XP and 2003
Microsoft Windows Vista, 7, 8, 10 and 11

Subdirectories[edit]

The file on many Linux systems defines the subdirectories created for users by default. Creation is normally done with the first login by Xdg-user-dirs, a tool to help manage "well known" user directories like desktop, downloads, documents, pictures, videos or music. The tool is also capable of localization (i.e. translation) of the folders names. [2]

Other features per operating system[edit]

Unix[edit]

In Unix, the current working directory is automatically set to a user's home directory when they log in. The ~ (tilde character) shorthand command refers to that particular user's home directory.

The Unix superuser has access to all directories on the filesystem, and hence can access home directories of all users. The superuser's home directory on older systems was /, but on many newer systems it is located at /root (Linux, BSD), or /var/root (Mac OS X).

VMS[edit]

In the OpenVMS operating system, a user's home directory is called the root directory, and the equivalent of a Unix/DOS/Windows/AmigaOS root directory is referred to as the Master File Directory.[citation needed]

Contrast with single-user operating systems[edit]

Single-user operating systems simply have a single directory or partition for all user files, there is no individual directory setup per user (though users can still setup and maintain directories inside this main working directory manually).

  • AmigaOS versions 2 and up have "System" and "Work" partitions on hard disks by default.
  • BeOS (and its successors) have a /home directory which contain the files belonging to the single user of the system.
  • Versions of Windows prior Windows 95 OEM Service Release 2 did not have a user folder, but since that release, \My Documents became in effect the single user's home directory.
  • NeXTSTEP and OPENSTEP in a single user, non-networked setup, /me is used, as well as /root when logged in as superuser.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Home User definition

  • Home use means use in a household or its immediate environment.

  • Alarm user means the person, firm, partnership, association, corporation, company, or organization of any kind in control of any building, structure, or facility or portion thereof wherein an alarm system is maintained.

  • Customer User means an employee of Customer, a Customer Affiliate or Business Partner.

  • data user means a natural or legal person who has lawful access to certain personal or non-personal data and has the right, including under Regulation (EU) 2016/679 in the case of personal data, to use that data for commercial or non-commercial purposes;

  • system user means a natural or legal person supplying to, or being supplied by, a transmission or distribution system;

  • Network Service User means an entity using Network Transmission Service.

  • Service User means a person required to pay a tax imposed under the provisions of this Chapter.

  • Service Users has the same meaning as defined in the Service Agreement (Part A) – Standard Terms of Funding.

  • Water user means a person, corporation, or other entity having a right to divert water from the Bear River for beneficial use;

  • Customer means the State agency or other entity identified in a contract as the party to receive commodities or contractual services pursuant to a contract or that orders commodities or contractual services via purchase order or other contractual instrument from the Contractor under the Contract. The “Customer” may also be the “Buyer” as defined in the PUR 1001 if it meets the definition of both terms.

  • Home school means the operation by the parent of a school-age person of a home study program of instruction that provides a basic academic educational program, including reading, language arts, mathematics, social studies and science;

  • Eligible Users means those authorized to use State Cooperative Contracts and includes the State of Utah’s government departments, institutions, agencies, political subdivisions (e.g., colleges, school districts, counties, cities, etc.), and, as applicable, nonprofit organizations, agencies of the federal government, or any other entity authorized by the laws of the State of Utah to participate in State Cooperative Contracts.

  • Homeless youth means persons found within the State who are under the age of 19, are not in a safe and stable living situation and cannot be reunited with their families.

  • Consumer means any person who is supplied with electricity for his own use by a licensee or the Government or by any other person engaged in the business of supplying electricity to the public under this Act or any other law for the time being in force and includes any person whose premises are for the time being connected for the purpose of receiving electricity with the works of a licensee, the Government or such other person, as the case may be;

  • Customer Portal means a web portal maintained by Liferay or a Liferay Affiliate that provides for various resources accessible to Liferay Subscription customers as further described in Section 2.1 below.

  • Active User means MDHS, its employees, and any third party consultants or outsourcers engaged by MDHS actively participating on the system in any given month of operation, who shall be bound to the terms and conditions of this Agreement. Licensor does not impose a limit on the number of Active Users accessing or registering to use the system.

  • Customer Usage Data means the Telecommunications Service usage data of CLEC’s Customer, measured in minutes, sub-minute increments, message units or otherwise, that is recorded by CenturyLink AMA equipment and forwarded to CLEC.

  • Homeless means Homeless as defined in Section 420.621, F.S.

  • Badge means a form of identification issued by the Commission identifying a registrant or licensee.

  • Customer Personal Data means any Personal Data that is processed by the Provider on behalf of the Customer in relation to this Agreement;

  • Cardholder means a person to whom a credit card is issued or who is authorized to use a credit card on be- half of or in addition to the person to whom the credit card is issued.

  • Retailer means every person engaged in the business of making sales at retail, or for distribution,

  • Mobile means any mobile delivery technology including 3G, 3.5G, 4G, 5G cellular technology, and any subsequent generation technology, edge, DVBH or DMB which is or may be used with radio frequency spectrum in any band, to enable or facilitate transmission of textual material, data, voice, video and/or multimedia service to any device (whether now known or hereafter developed) which is capable of receiving and/or sending voice and/or data and/or video communications by means of a device which is designed primarily as a portable device.

  • Ultimate user means a person who has lawfully obtained, and who possesses, a controlled substance for his own use or for the use of a member of his household or for an animal owned by him or a member of his household.

  • Access Card means an ATM card, debit card or credit card and includes our Visa Card

  • Primary Cardholder means a person other than a Supplementary Cardholder who is issued a Primary Card and for whom the Card Account is first opened by the Bank.

  • I have the same problem! I have no idea how to solve this. Please help.

    1 person found this reply helpful

    ·

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    I have a solution that will work on a folder by folder basis. Right click on the folder that is giving the error message, select Properties, then the Security tab. Highlight the HomeUsers group and select Full Control. That will stop the error message for that folder.

    I would like a better solution. This started after my upgrade to Windows 10.

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    Actually, I've been doing this and it works, up until the point where I turn off (shut down) my computer. When I turn it back on, those properties change and return to their previous settings; the HomeUsers group returns to not being Full Control. Basically, every time I shut down my computer and turn it on the next day, I have to turn all my folders back to Full Control. Every single time, every day...

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     I am having the same issue as well. Works for a day. I turn the computer off, and everything goes back to its default setting.

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    I have he same problem. I fix it by switching to local account from the Microsoft account during log in.

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    I found a workaround that will keep on re-boot. For some reason some Windows 10 upgrades do not add the correct user in the security permissions. You will need to add your login name to the security user list.

    1. Right click on the Picture, Document, or any other folder that denies permission to save the file.
    2. Select Properties.
    3. Select the Security tab.
    4. Advanced
    5. Add
    6. Click on Select a Principal at the top.
    7. Object type is User, Group....
    8. From this location: Your PC-NAME
    9. Enter the object name to select: Type in the name you use to login
    10. Give yourself Full control.
    11. OK out.

    Hopefully this will work for you too!

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    npm

    Deprecated. Just use .


    Get the path to the user home directory

    Install

    Usage

    constuserHome=require('user-home');console.log(userHome);//=> '/Users/sindresorhus'

    Returns in the unlikely scenario that the home directory can't be found.

    FAQ

    Why not just use the module?

    This module was made long before . When Node.js decided to add a native method for getting the user's home directory, I made a polyfill matching its API and decided to depend on it here, so not to have duplicate code. The main reason this one is still around is that lots of modules depend on it and I see no reason to inconvenience dependents by deprecating this. This one also gets the home directory on startup and returns a string rather than exposing a method, so it's faster, and I prefer this API. Modules are cheap in Node.js, so doesn't matter. Use whichever you prefer. I'm going to continue using this one.

    Related

    • user-home-cli - CLI for this module
    • home-or-tmp - Get the user home directory with fallback to the system temp directory

    Get professional support for this package with a Tidelift subscription
    Tidelift helps make open source sustainable for maintainers while giving companies
    assurances about security, maintenance, and licensing for their dependencies.

    3.8. /home : User home directories (optional)

    is a fairly standard concept, but it is clearly a site-specific filesystem. The setup will differ from host to host. Therefore, no program should assume any specific location for a home directory, rather it should query for it.

    User specific configuration files for applications are stored in the user's home directory in a file that starts with the '.' character (a "dot file"). If an application needs to create more than one dot file then they should be placed in a subdirectory with a name starting with a '.' character, (a "dot directory"). In this case the configuration files should not start with the '.' character.

    3.8.3. Home Directory Specifications and Conventions

    A number of efforts have been made in the past to standardize the layout of home directories, including the XDG Base Directories specification and the GLib conventions on user directory contents. Additional efforts in this direction are possible in the future. To accomodate software which makes use of these specifications and conventions, distributions may create directory hierarchies which follow the specifications and conventions. Those directory hierarchies may be located underneath home directories.

    Linux is a powerful multi-user operating system. It can have many concurrent users accessing the system at the same time. The system admin can manage permissions for each user to specify which user can access what part of the system.

    This guide will demonstrate how to create a new user with a different home directory in Linux.

    User home directory

    In Linux, each user gets its own home directory with exceptions like various system accounts. The home directory is a dedicated directory for the particular user to store the user-specific files. It’s also referred to as the “login directory”. Whenever logging in, the user will land on the respective home directory.

    By default, all the users in the system have their home directories located at the following location.

    $ ls-l/home


    Each home directory is named after the username of the user. For example, the home directory for the user “viktor” will look like this.

    $ /home/viktor


    However, we can establish a different location for the user directory. It can be set during the creation of the user account or moved later.

    Creating a user with a different home directory

    Creating a new user

    Each Linux system comes with useradd, a dedicated tool to create and update user accounts. It’s only available to the root user and non-root users with sudo privileges.

    To add a new user to the system, run the following useradd command. The flag “-m” tells useradd to create a dedicated home directory for the new user. If not used, then the user won’t have a dedicated home directory.

    $ sudo useradd -m<username>


    The user is added to the system. The user is also registered to various database files (/etc/passwd, /etc/shadow, /etc/gshadow, and /etc/group).

    The user isn’t accessible yet. The following command will assign a login password for the new user.

    $ sudopasswd<username>


    The user is ready and fully functional. Access the new user.

    $ su - <username>

    Check the location of the home directory of the new user.

    $ pwd

    Creating a user with a custom home directory

    By default, useradd will create the user’s home directory under “/home”. To specify the home directory in a different location, use the flag “-d”. Note that the directory must exist beforehand.

    $ sudo useradd -m-d<custom_home_dir_location><username>


    As always, use passwd to assign a login password for the new user.

    $ sudopasswd<username>


    Verify if the new user has a different home directory.

    $ su - <username>

    $ pwd ~

    Moving existing user home directory

    We can also assign a different home directory for an existing user. It will not move the contents of the existing home directory automatically to the new location.

    Create a new directory. It will be the new home directory of an existing user.

    $ mkdir-pv/extra/new_home


    Allow the new user complete access over the new directory.

    $ sudochown<username>/extra/new_home


    Move all the contents of the existing user home directory to the new one.

    $ sudomv/home/<username>/*/extra/new_home

    Assign the new directory as the home of the user.

    $ sudo usermod -d/extra/new_home -m<username>


    Verify the change.

    $ su - <username>

    $ pwd ~

    Final thoughts

    The home directory is an important part of a normal user account on Linux. This guide demonstrates how to assign a custom home directory to a new and existing user. These methods apply to any Linux distro.

    Happy computing!

    During Oracle Database Client installation, you can specify an optional Oracle Home User associated with the Oracle home.

    For example, assume that you use an Administrator user named to install the software (Oracle Installation user), then you can specify the domain user as the Oracle Home User for this installation. The specified Oracle home domain user must exist before you install the Oracle Database Client software.

    The Oracle Home User can be either the Windows Built-in Account (LocalService) or a Windows User Account. This account is used for running the Windows services for the Oracle home. Do not log in using this account to perform administrative tasks.

    Windows User Account can be a Windows Local User, Windows Domain User, Managed Services Account (MSA), or Group Managed Services Account (gMSA). Starting with Oracle Database 19c, Group Managed Services Account (gMSA) is introduced as an additional option.

    Using Windows built-in account, MSA, or gMSA enables you to install Oracle Database Client, and create and manage Database services without passwords.

    If you specify an existing user as the Oracle Home User, then the Windows User Account you specify can either be a Windows Domain User or a Windows Local User. If you specify a non-existing user as the Oracle Home User, then the Windows User Account you specify must be a Windows Local User. The new user is then created during installation and the created user is denied interactive logon privileges to the Windows computer. However, a Windows administrator can manage this account like any other Windows account.

    For enhanced security, Oracle recommends that you use the standard Windows User Account or Windows Built-in Account (LocalService), which is not an administrator account, to install Oracle Database Client.

    Note:

    You cannot change the Oracle Home User after the installation is complete. If you must change the Oracle Home User, then you must reinstall the Oracle Database Client software.

    When you specify an Oracle Home User, the installer configures that user as the Oracle Service user for all software services that run from the Oracle home. The Oracle Service user is the operating system user that the Oracle software services run as, or the user from which the services inherit privileges.

    Silent installation is enhanced to support password prompt for the Oracle Home User. So, customers and independent software vendors (ISV) can use response files without hard coding the password into the source code.

    Home directory

    Directory to hold files for a specific Home User home directory is a file system directory on a multi-useroperating system containing files for a given user of the system. The specifics of the home directory (such as its name and location) are defined by the operating system involved; for example, Linux / BSD Home User systems use /home/⟨username⟩ and Windows systems between 2000 and Server 2003 keep home directories in a folder called Documents and Settings, Home User.

    Description[edit]

    A user's home directory is intended to contain that user's files; including text documents, music, pictures or videos, etc. It may also include their configuration files of preferred settings for any software they have used there and might have tailored to their liking: web browserbookmarks, Home User, favorite desktopwallpaper and themes, passwords to wilcom embroidery studio E4.5 full crack download Free Activators external services accessed via a given software, etc. The user can install executable software in this directory, but Home User will only be available to users with permission to this directory, Home User. The home directory can be organized further with the use of sub-directories.

    The content of a user's home directory is protected by file system permissions, and by default is accessible to all authenticated users and administrators, Home User. Any Home User user that has been granted administrator privileges has authority to access any protected location on the filesystem including other users home directories.

    Benefits[edit]

    Separating user data from system-wide data avoids redundancy and makes backups of important files relatively simple. Furthermore, Trojan horses, viruses and worms running under the user's name and with their privileges will in most cases only be able to alter the files in the user's home directory, and perhaps some files belonging to workgroups the user is a part of, but not actual system files.[citation needed]

    Default home directory per operating system[edit]

    Operating systemPathEnvironment variable
    AT&T Unix (original version)
    Unix-derived
    Unix-based [1]
    BSD / Linux (FHS)
    SunOS / Solaris
    macOS
    Android
    Microsoft Windows NT
    Microsoft Windows 2000, XP and 2003
    Microsoft Windows Vista, 7, 8, 10 and 11

    Subdirectories[edit]

    The file on many Linux systems defines the subdirectories created for users by default. Creation is normally done with the first login by Xdg-user-dirs, a tool to help manage "well known" user directories like desktop, downloads, documents, pictures, videos or music. The tool is also capable of localization (i.e. translation) of the folders names. [2]

    Other features per operating system[edit]

    Unix[edit]

    In Unix, Home User, the current working directory is automatically set to a user's home directory when they log in. The ~ (tilde character) shorthand command refers to that particular user's home directory.

    The Unix superuser has access to all directories on the filesystem, and hence can access home directories of all users, Home User. The superuser's home directory on older systems was /, but on many newer systems it is located at /root (Linux, BSD), or /var/root (Mac OS X).

    VMS[edit]

    In the OpenVMS operating system, Home User, a user's home directory is called the root directory, and the equivalent of a Unix/DOS/Windows/AmigaOS root directory is referred to as the Master File Directory.[citation needed]

    Contrast with single-user operating systems[edit]

    Single-user operating systems simply have a single directory or partition for all user files, there is no individual directory setup per user (though users can still setup and maintain directories inside this main working directory manually).

    • AmigaOS versions 2 and up have "System" and "Work" partitions on hard disks by default.
    • BeOS (and its successors) have a /home directory which contain the files belonging to the single user of the system.
    • Versions of Windows prior Windows 95 OEM Service Release 2 did not have a user folder, but since that release, \My Documents became in effect the single user's home directory.
    • NeXTSTEP and OPENSTEP in a single user, non-networked setup, /me is used, as well as /root Home User logged in as superuser.

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    Linux is a powerful multi-user operating system. It can have many concurrent users accessing the system at the same time. The system admin can manage permissions for each user to specify which user can access what part of the system.

    This guide will demonstrate how to create a new user with a different home directory in Linux.

    User home directory

    In Linux, each user gets its own home directory with exceptions like various system accounts. The home directory is a dedicated directory for the particular user to Home User the user-specific files. It’s also referred to as the “login directory”. Whenever logging in, Home User, the user will land on the respective home directory.

    By default, all the users in the system have their home directories located at the following location.

    $ ls-l/home


    Each home directory is named after the username of the user. For example, the home directory for the user “viktor” will look like this.

    $ /home/viktor

    Home User alt="" width="1300" height="123">
    However, we can establish a different location for the user directory. It can be set during the creation of the user account or moved later.

    Creating a user with a different home directory

    Creating a new user

    Each Linux system comes with useradd, a dedicated tool to create and update user accounts. It’s only available to the root user and non-root users with sudo privileges.

    To add a new user to the system, run the following useradd command. The flag “-m” tells useradd to create a dedicated home directory for the new user, Home User. If not used, then the user won’t have a dedicated home directory.

    $ sudo useradd -m<username>


    The user is added to the system. The user is also registered to various database files (/etc/passwd, /etc/shadow, /etc/gshadow, and /etc/group).

    The user isn’t accessible yet. The following command will assign a login password for the new user.

    $ sudopasswd<username>


    The user is ready and fully functional, Home User. Access the new user.

    $ su - <username>

    Check the location of the home directory of the new user.

    $ pwd

    Creating a user with a custom home directory

    By default, useradd will create the user’s home directory under “/home”. To specify the home directory in a different location, use the flag Home User. Note that the directory must exist beforehand.

    $ sudo useradd -m-d<custom_home_dir_location><username>


    As always, use passwd to assign a login password for the new user.

    $ sudopasswd<username>


    Verify if the new user has a different home directory.

    $ su - <username>

    $ pwd ~

    Moving existing user home directory

    We can also assign a different home directory for an existing user. It will not move the contents of the existing home directory automatically to the new location.

    Create a new directory. It will be the new home directory of an existing user.

    $ mkdir-pv/extra/new_home


    Allow the new user complete access over the new directory.

    $ sudochown<username>/extra/new_home


    Move all the contents of the existing user home directory to the new one.

    $ sudomv/home/<username>/*/extra/new_home

    Assign the new directory as the home of the user.

    $ sudo usermod -d/extra/new_home -m<username>

    Home User alt="" width="1301" height="126">
    Verify the change.

    $ su - <username>

    $ pwd ~

    Final thoughts

    The home directory is an important part of a normal user account on Linux. This guide demonstrates how to assign a custom home directory to a new and existing user, Home User. These methods apply to any Linux distro.

    Happy computing!

    Home User definition

  • Home use means use in a household or its immediate environment.

  • Alarm user means the person, Home User, firm, partnership, association, corporation, company, or organization of any kind in control of any building, structure, or facility or portion thereof wherein an alarm system is maintained.

  • Customer User means Home User employee of Customer, a Customer Affiliate or Business Partner.

  • data user Home User a natural or legal person who has lawful access to certain personal or non-personal data and has the right, Home User, including under Regulation (EU) 2016/679 in the case of personal data, to use that data for commercial or non-commercial purposes;

  • system user means a natural or legal person supplying to, Home User, or being supplied by, a transmission or distribution system;

  • Network Service User means an entity using Network Transmission Service.

  • Service User means a person required to pay a tax imposed under the provisions of this Chapter.

  • Service Users has the same meaning as defined in the Service Agreement (Part A) – Standard Terms of Funding.

  • Water user means a person, corporation, or other Home User having a right to divert water from the Bear River for beneficial use;

  • Customer means the State agency or other entity identified in a contract as the party to receive commodities or contractual services pursuant to a contract or that orders commodities or contractual services via purchase order or other contractual instrument from the Contractor under the Contract. The “Customer” may also be the “Buyer” as defined in the PUR 1001 if it meets the definition of both terms.

  • Home school means the operation by the parent of a school-age person of a home study program of instruction that provides a basic academic educational program, including reading, language arts, mathematics, social studies and science;

  • Eligible Users means those authorized to use State Cooperative Contracts and includes the State of Utah’s government departments, institutions, agencies, political subdivisions (e.g., colleges, school districts, counties, cities, etc.), and, as applicable, nonprofit organizations, agencies of the federal government, or any other entity authorized by the laws of the State of Utah to participate in State Cooperative Contracts.

  • Homeless youth means persons found within the State who are under the age of 19, are not in a safe and stable living situation and cannot be reunited with their families.

  • Consumer means any person who is supplied with electricity for his own use by a licensee or the Government or by any other person engaged in the business of supplying electricity to the public under this Act or any other law for the time being in force and includes any person whose premises are for the time being connected for the purpose of receiving electricity with the works of a licensee, the Government or such other person, as the case may be;

  • Customer Portal means a web portal maintained by Liferay or a Liferay Affiliate that provides for various resources accessible to Liferay Subscription customers as further described in Section 2.1 below.

  • Active User means MDHS, its employees, and any third party consultants or outsourcers engaged by MDHS actively participating on the system in any given month of operation, who shall be bound to the terms and conditions of this Agreement. Licensor does not impose a limit on the number of Active Users accessing or registering to use the system.

  • Customer Usage Data means Home User Telecommunications Service usage data of CLEC’s Customer, measured in minutes, sub-minute increments, message units or otherwise, that is recorded by CenturyLink AMA equipment and forwarded to CLEC.

  • Homeless means Homeless as defined in Section 420.621, F.S.

  • Badge means a form of identification issued by the Commission identifying a registrant or licensee.

  • Customer Personal Data means any Personal Data that is processed by the Provider on behalf of the Customer in relation to this Agreement;

  • Cardholder means a person to whom a credit card is issued or who is authorized to use a credit card on be- half of or in addition to the person to whom the credit card is issued.

  • Retailer means every person engaged in the business of making sales at retail, or for distribution,

  • Mobile means any mobile delivery technology including 3G, Home User, 4G, 5G cellular technology, and any subsequent generation technology, Home User, edge, DVBH or DMB which is or may be used with radio frequency spectrum in any band, to enable or facilitate transmission of textual material, data, voice, video and/or multimedia service to any Home User (whether now known or hereafter developed) which is capable of receiving and/or sending voice and/or data and/or video communications by means of a device which is designed primarily as a portable device.

  • Ultimate user means a person who has lawfully obtained, and who possesses, a controlled substance for his own use or for the use of a member of his household or for an animal owned by him or a member of his household.

  • Access Card means an ATM card, debit card or credit card and includes our Visa Card

  • Primary Cardholder means a person other than a Supplementary Cardholder who is issued a Primary Card and for whom the Card Account is first opened by the Bank.

  • 3.8. /home : User home directories (optional)

    is a fairly standard concept, but it is clearly a site-specific filesystem. The setup will differ from host to host. Therefore, no program should assume any specific location for a home directory, rather it should query for it.

    User specific configuration files for applications are stored in the user's home directory in a file that starts with the '.' character (a "dot file"). If an application needs to create more than one dot file then they should be placed in a subdirectory with a name starting with a '.' character, (a "dot directory"). In this case the configuration files should not start with the '.' character.

    3.8.3. Home Directory Specifications and Conventions

    A number of efforts have been made in the past to standardize Home User the layout of home directories, including the XDG Base Directories specification and the GLib conventions on user directory contents, Home User. Additional efforts in this direction are possible in the future. To accomodate software Home User makes use of these specifications and conventions, distributions may create directory hierarchies which follow the specifications and conventions. Those directory hierarchies may be located underneath home directories.

    During Oracle Database Client installation, you can specify an optional Oracle Home User associated with the Oracle home.

    For example, assume that you use an Administrator user named to install the software (Oracle Installation user), then you can specify the domain user as the Oracle Home User for this installation. The specified Oracle home domain user must exist before you install the Oracle Database Client software.

    The Oracle Home User can be either the Windows Home User Account (LocalService) or a Windows User Account. This account is used for running the Windows services for the Oracle home. Do not log in using this account to perform administrative tasks.

    Windows User Account can be a Windows Local User, Windows Domain User, Managed Home User Services Account (MSA), or Group Managed Services Account Home User (gMSA). Starting with Oracle Database 19c, Group Managed Services Account (gMSA) is introduced as an additional option.

    Using Windows built-in account, MSA, or gMSA enables you to install Oracle Database Client, and create and manage Database services without passwords.

    If you specify an existing user as the Oracle Home User, then the Windows User Account you specify can either be a Windows Domain User or a Windows Local User, Home User. If you specify a non-existing user as the Oracle Home User, then the Windows User Account you specify must be a Windows Local User. The new user is then created during installation and the created user is denied interactive logon privileges to the Windows computer. However, a Windows administrator can manage this account like any other Windows account.

    For enhanced security, Oracle recommends that you use the standard Windows User Account or Windows Built-in Account (LocalService), which is not an administrator account, to install Oracle Database Client.

    Note:

    You cannot change the Oracle Home User after the installation is complete. If you must change the Oracle Home User, then you must reinstall Home User Oracle Database Client software.

    When you specify an Oracle Home User, Home User, the installer configures that user as the Oracle Service user for all software services that run from the Oracle home. The Oracle Service user is the operating system user that the Oracle software services run as, or the user from which the services inherit privileges.

    Silent installation is enhanced to support password prompt for the Oracle Home User. So, customers and independent software vendors (ISV) can use response files without hard coding the password into the source code.

    I have the same problem! I have no idea scanning application to solve this. Please help.

    1 person found this reply helpful

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    I have a solution that will work on a folder by folder basis. Right click on the folder that is giving the error message, select Properties, then the Security tab. Highlight the HomeUsers group and select Full Control. That will stop the error message for that folder.

    I would like a better solution, Home User. This started after my upgrade to Windows 10, Home User.

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    Actually, I've been doing this and it works, up until the point where I turn off (shut down) my computer. When I turn it back on, those properties change and return to their previous settings; the HomeUsers group returns to not being Full Control. Basically, Home User, every time I shut down my computer and turn it on the next day, I have to turn all my folders back to Full Control. Every single time, every day.

    Was this reply helpful?

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     I am having the same issue as well. Works for a day. I turn the computer off, Home User, and everything goes back to its default setting.

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    I have he same problem. I fix it by switching to local account from the Microsoft account during log in, Home User.

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    I found a workaround that will keep on re-boot. For some reason some Windows 10 upgrades do not add the correct user in the security permissions. You will need to add your login name to the security user list.

    1. Right click on the Picture, Document, or any other folder that denies permission to save the file.
    2. Select Properties.
    3. Select the Security tab.
    4. Advanced
    5. Add
    6. Click on Select a Principal at the top.
    7. Object type is User, Group.
    8. From this location: Your PC-NAME
    9. Enter the free image and photo editing software Free Activators name to select: Type in the name you use to login
    10. Give yourself Full control.
    11. OK out.

    Hopefully this will work for you too!

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    npm

    Deprecated. Just use .


    Get the path to the user home directory

    Install

    Usage

    constuserHome=require('user-home');console.log(userHome);//=> '/Users/sindresorhus'

    Returns in the unlikely scenario that the home directory can't be found.

    FAQ

    Why not just use the module?

    This module was made long before. When Node.js decided to add a native method for getting the user's home directory, I made a polyfill matching its API and decided to depend on it here, so not to have duplicate code. The main reason this one is still around is that lots of modules depend on it and I see no reason to inconvenience dependents by deprecating this. This kms activator download Free Activators also gets the home directory on startup and returns a string rather than exposing a method, so it's faster, and I prefer this API. Modules are cheap in Node.js, so doesn't matter. Use whichever you prefer. I'm going to continue using this one.

    Related

    • user-home-cli - CLI for this module
    • home-or-tmp - Get the user home directory with fallback to the system temp directory

    Get professional support for this package with a Tidelift subscription
    Tidelift helps make open source sustainable for maintainers while giving companies
    assurances about security, maintenance, and licensing for their dependencies.

    ';} ?>

    Home User

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