The Computer Science Department provides a set of Linux servers for student work. The systems hopper and turing are functionally equivalent and are cross linked so that logging into either system provides access to a student's files stored on either.
A third system, babbage, provides web services for
students. This is also linked to hopper/turing and can be accessed from
either once you are logged in by changing to the
public_html
directory found on your hopper/turing
account.
Use a ssh (secure-shell) client to log into hopper or turing. Linux and macOS systems have built-in command-line SSH clients. Modern versions of Windows (Windows 10 and above) also come with SSH, but it may need to be enabled (see instructions). Open a terminal and type:
ssh <YOUR_Z_ID>@hopper.cs.niu.edu
where your Z-ID is substituted for <YOUR_Z_ID
. You
will be prompted to enter your password.
PuTTY is an open-source SSH
client for Windows. After installing PuTTY, and starting the
application, you will be presented with a PuTTY Configuration dialog. In
that configuration, you should set the Host Name field to
hopper.cs.niu.edu
or turing.cs.niu.edu
. After
opening the connection, you will be prompted for a username and
password. Your username is your z-ID, and on our systems, that z-ID uses
lowercase letters.
If you are new to our Linux systems, you must first create/activate
your account. If this is the 1st time you are logging in, you should see
an "access denied" message. There is no account yet but a script should
be triggered to generate your user account. It is critical that you
terminate or close your ssh client before attempting to
login again. In the terminal, you can use the Ctrl+C
keystroke to do so. Give the system a minute to generate the new account
structure and repeat the login process. This time you should be able to
log in.
Change your password once you are logged in. You can use the command
passwd
to do this. Begin by typing passwd
at
the command prompt. It will prompt you for the old password with
something like:
Enter login(LDAP) password:
Enter the default password. If correct, the passwd
command will display
New password:
Enter a new password. Make it at least 8 characters long, use some
punctuation such as hypen, period, underscore, and also some numbers.
Consider substituting a e in a word with the number 3, an i with the
number 1, or an o with the number zero. Press Enter
when
you have entered the chosen password. If password is acceptable, the
passwd
command will prompt you to
Retype new password:
to to confirm it. If the word is too simple, the password system may reject it.
If you account is not created, it may be because:
If a student forgets their password, they can email Emmalynn Hoyt at ehoyt1+linuxacct@niu.edu for a password reset.