Hi everybody, I recently reinstalled ubuntu 23.04 on my laptop. I had a backup of my old home and copied that into my new home after installation, installed updates and rebooted. Sadly, I forgot to make myself the owner of those files before rebooting. Instead of the login screen where you would normally enter your password, It showed me a welcome screen where I had to create a new user. I did that, then fixed my earlier mistake, logged in as my real user and ran userdel to get rid of the account I had to create. However, now it always shows me this welcome screen and I always have to create a new user. If I go through that and log out, I can log in with my real user after clicking on “not listed?” on the login screen. I could just reinstall again, but is there a way to fix this?
It sucks, but I think reinstalling is the easiest way to fix this. Don’t forget to change ownership this time.
Ubuntu uses GDM: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/GDM
Hide user from login list
The users for the gdm user list are gathered by AccountsService. It will automatically hide system users (UID < 1000). To hide ordinary users from the login list create or edit a file named after the user to hide in /var/lib/AccountsService/users/ to contain at least:
/var/lib/AccountsService/users/username
[User] SystemAccount=true
Thank you for the hint, but disabling the unneeded user just caused the welcome screen to show up again. I just reinstalled it now.
Have tried autologin