Unix account setup

Steven Zeil

Last modified: Aug 29, 2023
Contents:

All students in this class must have an account on the CS Dept.’s Unix network. This is independent of any Midas/NetWare or other accounts that you might have through the ITS, the University’s general computing system.

1 Account Setup

  1. If you have had a CS Dept. account within the past year, it should be restored for you automatically, with your old login name and password

  2. If not, you can request a new account by going to the CS Dept home page and clicking on “Account Creation” in the “Computer Science Resources” area.

    • You may need to wait until you have been registered for at least 24 hours before you can create an account. (It takes that long for the information to get to us.)

    • If you are registered for a future semester, you generally cannot create a new account until the week before classes for that semester start.

  3. Once you have your account set up, including having replied to the confirmation email that you receive as part of the process, you should wait a few minutes, then return to this course and click here to try to view the “Log in” assignment. (You may not be ready to actually do that assignment yet, but we want to be sure that you can access it.)

2 If you have difficulties logging in

Do not return to the Account Creation page and create a second (or third or fourth…) account. This will only create problems identifying you to both this course and to many other CS courses in which you might enroll.

If you have already created multiple accounts, please email root@cs.odu.edu and tell them the account names (if you remember them) and ask that they remove all but one.

  1. You may have simply typed your login/user name or password incorrectly. Use your browser’s Back-up and Refresh buttons to try again.

    • Take note that, on our system, the user names use no upper-case letters.
    • Also, when logging in to the course website or to one of the Linux servers, you do not put “CS\” in front of your login name, as you might do to log in to a CS Dept Windows PC.
    • Similarly, do not add @odu.edu or any other portion of an email address to your login name.
  2. If you are registered for a CS Dept course but do not yet have a CS account, follow the instructions above to request up your account.

    • Is your Unix account active? The easiest way to check is to try logging in to one of our Linux machines or to use Remote Desktop to connect to our Windows Virtual Computer Lab.

  3. If you are able to log in to a CS Dept machine but not to the protected content on this course website,

    1. Have you waited at least 24 hours before trying to access protected content on the course website?

      After your account has been activated, your new login name needs to be written into the course enrollment records before my course website will become aware of it. That process takes place overnight.

    2. Are you really, really sure that you entered your login name and password correctly? These are taken directly from the same database used to authenticate your logins to the CS Dept Linux and Windows machines, so it is unlikely that they would be out of sync.

  4. If you have forgotten your password, you should contact the CS Dept systems staff to have your password reset:

    • Go to the CS Dept home page and click the “Password Reset” link (under “Computr Science Resources”).

  5. If you are unable to log in to either the Virtual Computer lab or to the Linux servers, you will need to contact the CS Systems staff to resolve your problems.

    • If you are unable to log in to those services, you will almost certainly be unable to log in to the course website as well.