Doug wrote: > I know Debian is different, Most of us say that in a good way. :-)
> but the distro I use and the man page for sudo, I believe, expects > there to be a root password, that sudo will expect when invoked. The most normal and traditional use of sudo is that sudo will expect the user's password, not the root password. The sudoers man page says: Unlike su(1), when sudoers requires authentication, it validates the invoking user's credentials, not the target user's (or root's) credentials. This can be changed via the rootpw, targetpw and runaspw flags, described later. But as it says it is configurable. Therefore we can assume that some admins will configure their system to use the root password. If it can be done then someone will do it just because they can. But in my experience that is not the typical case. Typically sudo will ask for the user password. And I think that is the best strategy to use with it. Otherwise you would simply use su. > And there would also be a user password for each user. A user who is > permitted to use sudo would be given the root password, and his name > would be entered into the sudoers file. That is certainly possible. But in my experience I have never seen that admin strategy implemented. Note that if you give the person the root password then there is no need to enter their name in the suders file. If they want to use sudo then they can enter their own name in that file. Note that I use sudo a lot because the behavior is convenient. But I do also know the root password on my systems. I also use su a lot. The sudo tool is awesome for providing a nice safety net for users given a limited superuser ability. But it is also awesome for the typical full admin too. > The main purpose of sudo, as I understand it, is to prevent a user > from opening up su and then leaving it open--sudo will close after a > selected interval of non use. Uhm... What? That description isn't quite right. By default they do different things. But it depends upon what you type in at the command line. Close what? A terminal? If you invoke a terminal with either su or sudo then it won't ever be automatically closed. If you invoke a command then both su and sudo will run the command to completion. No difference. In that case there isn't anything to close. The only time element is that sudo will keep track of the last time you enterred your password. If you run the command again and it is within the time out then it won't annoy you by asking you for the password again. You can use sudo to run commands one after the other and there is a persistent state. After the first password inquiry then subsequent commands will remember that you are still typing at your keyboard and that you are authorized. This resets after a timeout of five minutes by default. There is very little difference between: su sudo -s sudo $SHELL sudo su Or between: su - su -l sudo -i sudo su - sudo su -l Or between: su -c "foocommand" sudo foocommand > Some distros frown on the use of sudo, and do not make it easily > available. I don't undrstand that. I believe a software distribution is there to make installing and using software easy and convenient. If a distro is making it difficult to install and use software then I that does not seem to be a successful strategy to me. What distros make installing and using software difficult? Example? > But I don't understand a distro where anyone who has access to the > machine can use sudo. A KNOPPIX live read-only cdrom image system makes perfect sense that way. What else would you do? Also every other live read-only cd boot image such as debian-live and others. But I am curious if there are other examples that are not live cd boot images. > I guess I don't understand how a user whithout the root password, > and only his own password could use sudo, which seems to be how > Debian is set up. Debian is NOT set up that way by default. It depends upon the installation. Regardless it is available for installation and use afterward and many of us always install it. When sudo is configured that is the typical configuration. Sudo typically asks for the user's password not the root password. That is how it was designed to work. It is configurable otherwise. Perhaps you have configured it otherwise on your system and have since forgotten? I believe Ubuntu does install sudo by default. And I think it is specifically because users do not deal with passwords very well. Most of the masses would prefer not to have a password at all. And I will vouch for that too. I often see people struggle to understand why a password is needed. And often these are very smart in their field engineers! That is why we hear about fingerprint readers and other biometrics. Therefore systems like Ubuntu have reduced the number of passwords from two down to one by using this strategy. They are just following the demand of their base users. Please note that sudo is not a new thing. It is not an Ubuntu thing as I sometimes hear. I have been using sudo on Unix systems for a very long time and well before GNU/Linux systems. Sudo has been on HP-UX, SunOS, Solaris, IBM AIX and others for many years. It isn't anything new. It is a good worthy tool. Bob
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