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Special Forums Cybersecurity Remove need for sudo for mount/umount Post 302396084 by Corona688 on Wednesday 17th of February 2010 04:23:33 PM
Old 02-17-2010
If you're not using sudo, its configuration isn't relevant. sudo options are sudo's alone and don't matter when you don't use it.

If these things are being mounted by hand, could you just alias mount to sudo mount in their .bashrc? Users could thus run 'mount' and the shell would run 'sudo mount'. This is a lot safer than the alternative, i.e. setting the mount binary setuid so it always runs as root!
 

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MOUNT(2)							System Calls Manual							  MOUNT(2)

NAME
mount, umount - mount or umount a file system SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h> #include <sys/mount.h> int mount(char *special, char *name, int flag) int umount(char *name) DESCRIPTION
Mount() tells the system that the file system special is to be mounted on the file name, effectively overlaying name with the file tree on special. Name may of any type, except that if the root of special is a directory, then name must also be a directory. Special must be a block special file, except for loopback mounts. For loopback mounts a normal file or directory is used for special, which must be seen as the root of a virtual device. Flag is 0 for a read-write mount, 1 for read-only. Umount() removes the connection between a device and a mount point, name may refer to either of them. If more than one device is mounted on the same mount point then unmounting at the mount point removes the last mounted device, unmounting a device removes precisely that device. The unmount will only succeed if none of the files on the device are in use. Both calls may only be executed by the super-user. SEE ALSO
mount(1), umount(1). AUTHOR
Kees J. Bot (kjb@cs.vu.nl) MOUNT(2)
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