Greetings! With the wonders of Google translation even a monolingual American like me can participate on a Russian language forum! It’s truly amazing that with the click of a button an entire page of Russian suddenly becomes readable. I hope it works the same going back the other way; otherwise, some of you may not be able to read this.
In any case, I just wanted to comment on this topic regarding the problem with the administrative login on Linux. I had the same problem on my Linux Mint machine after installing Dr. Web, and I came here looking for a solution. I’m glad I was able to find this thread because the information above set me on the right track to solving the problem.
For anyone else who has this issue, I just wanted to provide some clearer information. First, check the admin group settings by typing in a terminal:
drweb-ctl cfshow
Scroll up (or down) to the line that looks like «root.admingroup =». You will more than likely find there is no entry after the equal sign. In this case, Dr. Web assumes that all users are not administrators and therefore will not let anyone log in to the administrative settings. To fix the problem type:
drweb-ctl cfset root.admingroup adm
You should substitute «adm» for whatever the name of the administrator group is called on your system. On my system it was «adm». Also, do not use an equal sign when typing the command. After doing this, you should be able to log in to the Dr. Web administrative settings. Dr. Web will now know which group of users are administrators.
My thanks to this forum…. and to Google Translate for helping me to fix my Dr. Web installation. Also, thanks to the people at Dr. Web for such a great product!