TL;DR: watch the 2 minutes video for the fix.
Story time !
It’s been a hot minute (~1year) since I needed/wanted to tinker with my Steam Deck. It’s currently living its best life paired with the official dock as a desktop PC for my kid (e.g. YouTube and Roblox dedicated machine). So yeah, I went and forgot the sudo password I set back then, and I unhelpfully did not save it in Keepass or anything.
Today I put in the work to reset it… Here goes my journey.
- Try out every password variants of mine I can think of for 20 minutes. FAIL.
- Google it, stumble on some real stupid “solutions” promoted to the top of the results. FFS Google.
- Lots of YT videos seem to agree that recovery media is the way to go. Seems overkill. Cannot we get a root shell at startup or something ?
- Find an alternative method that looks suuuper risky (tinkers with the recovery partition) [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYBpEysFMDM]. Nope not going to try that one.
- Go back to /r/SteamDeck (been a while) again the consensus is to use recovery media. Ok ok, recovery media it is !
- Follow instructions at https://help.steampowered.com/en/faqs/view/1B71-EDF2-EB6D-2BB3 and make a bootable USB drive. Easy Peasy.
- Muck about for a while with the dock’s USB ports because the drive is too large or the ports are too close together. FFS Valve.
- Boot successfully on the recovery media, and start the 3 commands-long procedure.
sudo ~/tools/repair_device.sh chroot
rm -f /var/lib/overlays/etc/upper/passwd
rm -f /var/lib/overlays/etc/upper/shadow
- First command fails, which is a shame since the others cannot work if this one does not. Fuck.
- Back to googling and redditing (beggars can’t be choosers). Find someone with a very similar error in a quite recent post. No answers though, except one by the OP himself who says he found a way AND DOCUMENTED IT. Thank you /u/TheArtfulAardvark for proper Internet etiquette. Obligatory XKCD curse avoided.
- Watch the 2 minutes-long video with cautious optimism. Does not seem too hard nor risky… To good to be true
- Perform the procedure, goes more or less exactly as described in the video (not exactly the same version of the boot menu, but same items).
- Fail to return to gaming mode with CTRL-ALT-F1 for some reason, so trigger a command line
reboot
. - Check that the parameter added to GRUB was not saved (it was not).
- Return to desktop mode and finally set a new password with
passwd
. Exhales. Thanks for the video and instructions 10 Minute Steam Deck Gamer.
With all of the endless discussion about content on Lemmy, this is a shining example of top tier content. Thank you.
- Invest in a Password Manager (like BitWarden).
Glad you got things working again!
I’ve been using Keepass for years for this ! And yet in the fever of tinkering with the hot new toy back then, forgot to save the password. But yes, this time around I did save it 😅 .
I’ve been using KeePassXC for years and can’t live without it… because it has all my passwords.
Me also is using KeePassXC but I wonder how do you guys keep in sync the DB with the steam deck?
I have my DB synced with my Nextcloud instance. Then I just sync that instance with the Steam Deck.
Tl;dw:
Append systemd.debug_shell to the boot command line.
Complete written instructions are in fact in the video description, too. Here they are, for first timers 😉
- While the Steam Deck is powered off, hold the 3dots (QAM) and turn on the Steam Deck.
- The recovery menu will appear. On your keyboard highlight the 3rd option - CURRENT (OS Boot Menu) then press enter.
- The GRUB menu will appear. Highlight the 1st option - SteamOS then on your keyboard press “e” to edit the boot options.
- Press down cursor on the keyboard until steamenv_boot is highlighted. Press “end” to go to the end of the line.
- Enter the command -
systemd.debug_shell
- Press CTRL-X to boot!
- Once SteamOS loads, press CTL-ALT-F9 on the keyboard to access the root debug shell.
- Enter the command -
passwd deck
- Enter new password and retype the new password.
- Once done, press CTL-ALT-F1 on the keyboard to go back to game mode.
Okay, you got me there. In all fairness, as instruction videos go, that one is on the tame side.
Thanks for posting the instructions here.
Thank you for posting this here!
Could you not have just factory reset it? Or was this specifically an attempt to recover the root password without losing your data?
Yes, it would have worked. It’s basically the nuclear option however, so definitely not my first choice. Generally speaking, you can reset credentials of any computer you have physical access to. The question is, how much data do you lose in the process.
Thanks for sharing the full journey!