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    Are these logs normal under OS Account Changes?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
    5 Posts 2 Posters 369 Views
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    • R
      rasputinthegreatest
      last edited by rasputinthegreatest

      Hey guys. I am trying to find information if these logs under "OS Account Changes" are nornal on a fresh pfSense install? Especially the "2025-02-15 12:34:10 [unknown:groupmod] admins(1999)
      2025-02-19 16:00:52 [unknown:userdel] admin(0) account removed" Any help is appreciated.

      2023-12-06 21:12:27 [root:groupadd] cyrus(60)
      2023-12-06 21:12:27 [root:useradd] cyrus(60):cyrus(60):the cyrus mail server:/nonexistent:/usr/sbin/nologin
      2023-12-06 21:12:30 [root:groupadd] messagebus(556)
      2023-12-06 21:12:30 [root:useradd] messagebus(556):messagebus(556):D-BUS Daemon User:/nonexistent:/usr/sbin/nologin
      2023-12-06 21:12:32 [root:groupadd] openvpn(301)
      2023-12-06 21:12:32 [root:useradd] openvpn(301):openvpn(301):OpenVPN pseudo-user:/nonexistent:/usr/sbin/nologin
      2023-12-06 21:12:32 [root:groupadd] dhcpd(136)
      2023-12-06 21:12:32 [root:useradd] dhcpd(136):dhcpd(136):ISC DHCP daemon:/nonexistent:/usr/sbin/nologin
      2025-02-15 13:04:29 [unknown:groupadd] all(1998)
      2025-02-15 13:04:29 [unknown:usermod] root(0):wheel(0):Charlie &:/root:/bin/sh
      2025-02-15 13:04:29 [unknown:useradd] admin(0):wheel(0):System Administrator:/root:/etc/rc.initial
      2025-02-15 13:04:29 [unknown:useradd] admin(0) home /root made
      2025-02-15 13:04:29 [unknown:groupmod] all(1998)
      2025-02-15 13:04:29 [unknown:groupadd] admins(1999)
      2025-02-15 12:09:47 [root:usermod] root(0):wheel(0):Charlie &:/root:/bin/sh
      2025-02-15 12:09:47 [root:usermod] admin(0):wheel(0):System Administrator:/root:/etc/rc.initial
      2025-02-15 12:34:09 [unknown:userdel] admin(0) account removed
      2025-02-15 12:34:09 [unknown:groupmod] all(1998)
      2025-02-15 12:34:09 [unknown:usermod] root(0):wheel(0):Charlie &:/root:/bin/sh
      2025-02-15 12:34:09 [unknown:useradd] admin(0):wheel(0):System Administrator:/root:/etc/rc.initial
      2025-02-15 12:34:09 [unknown:useradd] admin(0) home /root made
      2025-02-15 12:34:10 [unknown:groupmod] all(1998)
      2025-02-15 12:34:10 [unknown:groupmod] admins(1999)
      2025-02-19 16:00:52 [unknown:userdel] admin(0) account removed
      2025-02-19 16:00:52 [unknown:groupmod] all(1998)
      2025-02-19 16:00:52 [unknown:usermod] root(0):wheel(0):Charlie &:/root:/bin/sh
      2025-02-19 16:00:52 [unknown:useradd] admin(0):wheel(0):System Administrator:/root:/etc/rc.initial
      2025-02-19 16:00:52 [unknown:useradd] admin(0) home /root made
      2025-02-19 16:00:52 [unknown:groupmod] all(1998)
      2025-02-19 16:00:52 [unknown:groupmod] admins(1999)
      

      It also says under OS User Events

       still logged in 		ttyv0 	root 
      
      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • stephenw10S
        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
        last edited by stephenw10

        Where are you seeing that log? Which pfSense version?

        Edit: Ah I see. Yes, those are normal. In pfSense all the users and groups are re-created at each boot.

        ttyv0 is just the local console, so that's also expected.

        R 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • R
          rasputinthegreatest @stephenw10
          last edited by rasputinthegreatest

          @stephenw10 Hey thanks a lot for the answer. I thought so too but wanted to make sure :)

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • R
            rasputinthegreatest @stephenw10
            last edited by rasputinthegreatest

            This post is deleted!
            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • stephenw10S
              stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
              last edited by

              Something in your network to connecting to those for DNS. It could be unbound in pfSense directly if those are the servers for some domain a client is trying to resolve. It's unlikely to be a problem.

              You could check the state table to see if any internal clients are connecting to it directly.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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