I strongly suspect that the hacked up version of the debian installer someone made available for installing raspbian (which isn't very well supported) does the same. If one is given it sets up things in the traditional way, if one is not given it sets up "ubuntu style sudo". The debian installer asks the user for a root password. How the users are set up will depend on the behaviour of that someone or something. So if you want a system that you can actually log into after booting it then something or someone has to do some user setup after running debootstrap. Mind that Debian based distro's, like Ubuntu and Mint, are not Debian by definition.Ī freshly debootstraped debian or raspbian rootfs has the root account locked out, it also doesn't have sudo installed or configured. Unless I missed something in the last decade of using Debian. PS: Debian most certainly has a root password by default, Raspbian is the only Debian (that I know of) that uses sudo by default, like Ubuntu does.
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