<disclaimer>I'm not a current sudo user -- know very little about it</>

I'm wondering what the downside is to sudo in managing a Debian machine,
if any, if admin duties are not shared.

I don't use sudo -- I try and minimize my root access as much as possible.  I jump
into root only to apt-get install or restart a server and often do that
all with one su command never gaining a root shell.

But I'm wondering if anyone finds that they can manage a Debian machine
fine with just using sudo, and if (as the admin) that provides much benefit.

The logging would be good.

Currently, my account where I spend most of my time is a normal account
and the only way to do root stuff is to su to root.  If I use sudo (to
try and provide most admin functions) then I would worry because my
normal account then has more privileges that I'd want.  Then someone only
need to gain access to my account instead of root.  Can't ssh to root,
but can ssh to my account, etc.






-- 
Bill Moseley
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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