On 31/1/20 5:21 am, Patrick Bartek wrote:
On Thu, 30 Jan 2020 18:29:06 +1100
Keith Bainbridge <ke1th3...@gmail.com> wrote:
On 29/1/20 6:02 am, Patrick Bartek wrote:
My point is that sudo is more of a security "hole" since it only
requires a user's password which in my experience are less secure since
most users create short, easy to remember ones.
Which is why I suggested you tell sudo to require root password.
How is that any different from just using su -c and not even
implementing sudo at all?
B
Good afternoon
I found setting su -c aliases frustratingly difficult. Mainly connected
with connecting strings of commands such as apt update && apt upgrade
I have an alias for su -c ' for when I wanted a rarely used command,
but more often than not I forgot to type the closing' - further
frustration.
Aliases for sudo commands are simpler to write, somehow.
I was also entering root password several times more often than I needed
with sudo. my old RSI was complaining.
Only root can use sudo. I need the password lass often, and it is not
remembered in other terminal sessions, other than the one I use it.
If I am broken into, the burglar needs root password as well as my user
password to get to my back-ups etc. My user password got 'very strong'
ratings on installations that rate them. Root must be at least one level
stronger.
Open source is about choices. I'll be crying severely if I have chosen
wrong in this case.
--
Keith Bainbridge
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
0447 667 468