Classic operating system passwords, which refer to passwords on 13 + year old operating systems are much different in setting.
You should at minimum be able to find your Darwin version if running some version of Mac OS X by booting with command-S on a wired USB keyboard.
That should help tell us your Mac OS X version. This table comes from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darwin_(operating_system)
| Version |
Date |
Corresponding releases |
Notes |
| 0.1 |
March 16, 1999 |
Mac OS X DP |
0.1 is contrived (for sorting and identification) as this identified itself simply as Mac OS 10.0 |
| 0.2 |
November 10, 1999 |
Mac OS X DP2 |
| 1.0 |
February 2000 |
Mac OS X DP3 |
| 1.1 |
April 5, 2000 |
Mac OS X DP4 |
| 1.2.1 |
November 15, 2000 |
Mac OS X Public Beta |
Code named "Kodiak" |
| 1.3.1 |
April 13, 2001 |
Mac OS X v10.0 |
First commercial release of Darwin |
| 1.3.1 |
June 21, 2001 |
Mac OS X v10.0.4 |
All releases of "Cheetah" (10.0–10.0.4) had the same version of Darwin |
| 1.4.1 |
October 2, 2001 |
Mac OS X v10.1 |
Performance improvements to "boot time, real-time threads, thread management, cache flushing, and preemption handling," support for SMB network file system, Wget replaced with cURL.[15] |
| 5.1 |
November 12, 2001 |
Mac OS X v10.1.1 |
Change in numbering scheme to match Mac OS X build numbering scheme (e.g., Mac OS X v10.1 contains build numbers starting with 5 so Mac OS X v10.1.1 is now based on Darwin 5.1; i.e., 10.1 means 5 so 10.1.1 means 5.1, etc.) |
| 5.5 |
June 5, 2002 |
Mac OS X v10.1.5 |
Last release of "Puma" |
| 6.0.1 |
September 23, 2002 |
Mac OS X v10.2(Darwin 6.0.2) |
GCC upgraded from 2 to 3.1, IPv6 and IPSec support, mDNSResponder service discovery daemon (Rendezvous), addition of CUPS, Ruby, and Python, journaling support in HFS+ (Darwin 6.2), application profiles ("pre-heat files") for faster program launching.[16] |
| 6.8 |
October 3, 2003 |
Mac OS X v10.2.8 |
Last release of "Jaguar" |
| 7.0 |
October 24, 2003 |
Mac OS X v10.3 |
BSD layer synchronized with FreeBSD 5, automatic file defragmentation, hot-file clustering, and optional case sensitivity in HFS+, bash instead of tcsh as default shell, read-only NTFS support (Darwin 7.9).[17] |
| 7.9 |
April 15, 2005 |
Mac OS X v10.3.9 |
Last release of "Panther" |
| 8.0 |
April 29, 2005 |
Mac OS X v10.4 Mac OS X forApple TV(Darwin 8.8.2) |
Stable kernel programming interface, finer-grained kernel locking, 64-bit BSD layer, launchd service managementframework, extended file attributes, access control lists, commands such as cp and mv updated to preserve extended attributes and resource forks.[18] |
| 8.11 |
November 14, 2007 |
Mac OS X v10.4.11 |
Last release of "Tiger" |
| 9.0 |
October 26, 2007 |
iPhone OS 1(Darwin 9.0.0d1) Mac OS X v10.5 |
Full POSIX compliance, improved hierarchical process scheduling model, dynamically allocated swap files, dynamic resource limits (for files and processes), process sandboxing, address space layout randomization, DTrace tracingframework, file system events daemon, directory hard links, Apache 1.3 and PHP 4 updated to Apache 2.2 and PHP 5, read-only ZFS support.[19] |
| 9.8 |
August 5, 2009 |
Mac OS X v10.5.8 |
Last release of "Leopard" |
| 10.0 |
August 28, 2009 |
Mac OS X v10.6 iOS 4 |
End of official support for PowerPC architecture (although several fat binaries, such as Kernel, still contain PPC images); 64-bit kernel and drivers, libdispatch task parallelization framework, OpenCL heterogeneous computingframework, support for blocks in C, transparent file compression in HFS+.[20] |
| 10.8 |
June 23, 2011 |
Mac OS X v10.6.8 |
Last release of "Snow Leopard" |
| 11.0.0 |
July 20, 2011 |
Mac OS X v10.7 iOS 5[21] |
XNU no longer supports PPC binaries (fat binary only for i386, x86_64). XNU requires an x86_64 processor. Improved sandboxing of applications |
| 11.4.2 |
October 4, 2012 |
Mac OS X v10.7.5 |
Last release of "Lion", supplemental |
| 12.0.0 |
February 16, 2012 |
OS X v10.8 |
Code named "Mountain Lion"; the word "Mac" has been dropped from the name |
| 12.5.0 |
September 12, 2013 |
OS X v10.8.5 |
Last release of "Mountain Lion" |
| 13.0.0 |
June 11, 2013 |
iOS 7 and OS X v10.9 |
If you are indeed running a Classic operating system, here's how to reset your password:
Mac OS 9.1 - forgot password - reset
Here's how to reset your password with Apple Article to reset the password for OS X 10.6.8 and earlier, and 10.7 and later.
Note: Macs can't boot an operating system older than shipped with them, or a different Mac model or different version of the same Mac model's installer disc. They can use newer retail discs as long as they meet specs. Lastly no discs were included for Mac OS X 10.7 or later.