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muru
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leeand00
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Some documentationdocumentation I'm going through has a boolean switch on whether or not a user is a 'system' user or a 'normal' user (defaulting to 'normal').

What is the difference between these two modes of user-ship? I don't need to learn what a user is or why you need them (even 'fake' ones), but this particular distinction isn't intuitive to me.

Some documentation I'm going through has a boolean switch on whether or not a user is a 'system' user or a 'normal' user (defaulting to 'normal').

What is the difference between these two modes of user-ship? I don't need to learn what a user is or why you need them (even 'fake' ones), but this particular distinction isn't intuitive to me.

Some documentation I'm going through has a boolean switch on whether or not a user is a 'system' user or a 'normal' user (defaulting to 'normal').

What is the difference between these two modes of user-ship? I don't need to learn what a user is or why you need them (even 'fake' ones), but this particular distinction isn't intuitive to me.

see https://unix.meta.stackexchange.com/q/5138/28980
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Sean Allred
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Rui F Ribeiro
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I believe this section of text is important to define the question's scope. If you still disagree, leave a note in the edit summary with your reasoning.
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Sean Allred
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deleted 75 characters in body
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Rui F Ribeiro
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Sean Allred
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Sean Allred
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