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Admin Account not accessible

I did the following commands as described

fsck -fy

mount -uw /

rm /var/db/.AppleSetupDone

reboot

But at the rm /var/db/.applesetupdone

I get that the file .applesetupdone is a read - only file.

My account has changed to standard and have no other account on my macbook.

How to creat an admin account.

Thanx

Posted on Jul 25, 2018 1:38 AM

Reply
8 replies

Jul 25, 2018 9:14 AM in response to Quosaihuska

As described where?


Did you begin by starting your Mac in Single User mode, as described below?



If there are no longer any User Accounts with Administrator privileges on your Mac, then please read and follow these instructions.



Read the lengthy procedure that follows. You should probably print it vs. writing down the steps or trying to repeat it from memory. Don't be put off by the length of the instructions. Some of the steps are optional. It's simple and will only take a few moments.


It is also overly conservative, but I have used it myself recently and I know it will work.



As I understand it, you have a Mac with no Administrator accounts. Of course that is not supposed to be possible, but if that really is the case you can use the following technique to create a new, temporary Administrator account, the sole purpose of which will be to log in as an Administrator that can give your normal account Admin privileges.


There may be other techniques to recover from the "impossible" circumstance in which you find yourself, but the following is one that I have successfully used in the past.


Please read everything that follows before continuing. If you have only the one computer you will need to print this for reference.


Prerequisites:


  • If you have not done so already, create a reliable backup in the event something unexpected occurs.

    To learn how to use Time Machine please read Use Time Machine to back up or restore your Mac - Apple Support.

  • If you configured an EFI Firmware Passwordthat will preclude recovery, unless you know that password.

    A Firmware Password precludes starting a Mac in single-user mode, so you will need to temporarily remove it before continuing.

  • If you encrypted your startup volume with FileVault, its password will also be required to unlock the disk.

    That password may or may not be the same login password you have been accustomed to using.

Confirm each of the above prerequisites before continuing.

Then,

  • Power on or restart your Mac.
  • At the chime or grey screen, hold and S on your keyboard (two fingers) to enter single-user mode.
  • At the localhost:/ root# prompt, type


fsck -fy

...and press Return.

This is a simple check for file system integrity and is optional. It may take a few minutes to complete during which time various messages will appear. None of them are relevant unless they indicate some unrecoverable error. Be patient. If you get concerned that the system has stalled or become unresponsive press the Return key. Nothing will happen other than to echo the Return character, advancing the text on the screen, confirming your Mac has not completely frozen.

When the integrity check completes pressing the Return key will result in the localhost prompt again, waiting for your input.


At the localhost:/ root# prompt, type each of the following lines, exactly as written, including capitalization, one line at a time, each line followed by the Return key. There is a single space preceding the first "slash" ( / ) character in each line:


mount -uw /

rm /var/db/.AppleSetupDone

reboot


The Mac will restart, and then take you through the entire setup and registration process that you have not seen since you originally unboxed it. Do not be concerned—none of the above deletes any information. All your pre-existing user accounts will still available, assuming they were intact prior to beginning this procedure.


Do not elect to transfer your information from another Mac: When the "Transfer Information to This Mac" screen appears, select "Do not transfer any information now" and press Continue.


At the "Create a Computer Account" screen, create the new, temporary account using a different "Full name" and "Account name" than the one you already use. Remember the password you select. Provide a password hint if you wish. You don't have to sign in to iCloud or anything else you might decide to do if you wanted to use that User Account for anything else.


"Allow this Account to unlock the disk" will be selected by default, so confirm that it is because that's the key to fixing the problem.


When it completes, log in under that new account. Use System Preferences to change your normal account to "Allow user to administer this computer". Log out, log in under your normal account and verify you can use it without restriction.


After that, you can safely delete the temporary account you just created by following these instructions: Delete a user or group - Apple Support. Before removing it, confirm you don't need any of the files you might have created in that Account.


Jul 25, 2018 10:26 AM in response to John Galt

As described in one your previous posts, https://discussions.apple.com/thread/8259250

I followed your instructions to the letter, it got stuck at the third step:

rm /var/db/.AppleSetupDone, Pressed enter and the following line appears

override r--------- root/wheel for /var/db/.AppleSetupDone? I waited for some time and nothing happens, then I pressed enter. and root# prompt appears and write reboot.

Thanx

Admin Account not accessible

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