Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers /etc/sudoers for allowing oracle user to /var/log/messages Post 302543300 by mirni on Saturday 30th of July 2011 07:34:29 PM
Old 07-30-2011
Quote:
oracle ALL= (root) /bin/view, /var/log/messages, /bin/more
This here will allow user oracle to run /bin/view as root. Is there any particular reason you're putting (root) in there? Imagine someone would make a link /bin/view --> /bin/rm. oracle user would run /bin/rm as root. The (root) there is not a good idea.

Furthermore, you are specifying /var/log/messages in a comma separated list of commands. Sudo interprets this as:
oracle can run
/bin/view
/var/log/messages
/bin/more
But /var/log/messages is not executable (I hope!). The same security concern as above arises.
Also, user oracle can do /bin/more <anything>.

What you probably want is
Code:
oracle ALL = /bin/view, /bin/more /var/log/messages

Which will allow user oracle to run /bin/view with any arguments, and /bin/more /var/log/messages.

This way it will run the commands as user oracle (UID == ID of user oracle) but with root privileges (effective UID == 0 (root ID) ).
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

diff b/w /var/log/syslog and /var/adm/messages

hi sirs can u tell the difference between /var/log/syslogs and /var/adm/messages in my working place i am having two servers. in one servers messages file is empty and syslog file is going on increasing.. and in another servers message file is going on increasing but syslog file is... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: tv.praveenkumar
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

/var/adm/messages records... [ID 702911 user.error] AEN event ...

Warning... I am a newb. :) I basically know how to add/rm users, kill pids and monitor diskspace. Not an idiot, but honestly a windows database person. I don't know much about what I am asking about. In the /var/adm/messages file, today this was added: Jan 24 09:16:51 my_server login: ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: madEG
3 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

/var/adm/messages vs /var/log/messages

The /var/adm/messages in Solaris seem to log more system messages/errors compared to /var/log/messages in Linux. I checked the log level in Linux and they seem OK. Is there any other log file that contains the messages or is it just that Linux doesn't log great many things? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gomes1333
2 Replies

4. Solaris

Difference between /var/log/syslog and /var/adm/messages

Hi, Is the contents in /var/log/syslog and /var/adm/messages are same?? Regards (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: vks47
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

How can view log messages between two time frame from /var/log/message or any type of log files

How can view log messages between two time frame from /var/log/message or any type of log files. when logfiles are very big and especially many messages with in few minutes, I would like to display log messages between 5 minute interval. Could you pls give me the command? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: johnveslin
1 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

fprintd messages in /var/log/messages

Whenever a user uses su I get the following error messages in /var/log/messages: Nov 23 04:24:55 <REMOVED> abrt: saved core dump of pid 26141 (/usr/libexec/fprintd) to /var/spool/abrt/ccpp-1322018695-26141.new/coredump (753664 bytes) Nov 23 04:24:55 <REMOVED> abrtd: Directory... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: JakesHat
3 Replies

7. SuSE

Non root user want to see /var/log/messages - any suse equivalent of Solaris dmesg

Hi New to Suse - mainly used Solaris. In solaris dmesg will also show you contents of messages log file but in Suse Liux it doesnt appear to. I dont have root access to this Suse server, and wondering is there any other tool / utility that allows me to see the messages file contents like on... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: frustrated1
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Log all the commands input by user at real time in /var/log/messages

Below is my script to log all the command input by any user to /var/log/messages. But I cant achieve the desired output that i want. PLease see below. function log2syslog { declare COMMAND COMMAND=$(fc -ln -0) logger -p local1.notice -t bash -i -- "$USER:$COMMAND" } trap... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: invinzin21
12 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Is there a BASH script allowing me to grep specifics from /var/log/messages?

I am wondering if there is a script (if one exists, not confident in my own scripting ability) that is able to bring up specified information from the /var/log/messages. I need to show logged traffic on specific dates and times and protocols (ie. Show all insecure FTP traffic (most likely via... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: vgplayer54
13 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Transfer the logs being thrown into /var/log/messages into another file example /var/log/volumelog

I have been searching and reading about syslog. I would like to know how to Transfer the logs being thrown into /var/log/messages into another file example /var/log/volumelog. tail -f /var/log/messages dblogger: msg_to_dbrow: no logtype using missing dblogger: msg_to_dbrow_str: val ==... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kenshinhimura
2 Replies
syslog.conf(4)							   File Formats 						    syslog.conf(4)

NAME
syslog.conf - configuration file for syslogd system log daemon SYNOPSIS
/etc/syslog.conf DESCRIPTION
The file /etc/syslog.conf contains information used by the system log daemon, syslogd(1M), to forward a system message to appropriate log files and/or users. syslogd preprocesses this file through m4(1) to obtain the correct information for certain log files, defining LOGHOST if the address of "loghost" is the same as one of the addresses of the host that is running syslogd. A configuration entry is composed of two TAB-separated fields: selector action The selector field contains a semicolon-separated list of priority specifications of the form: facility.level [ ; facility.level ] where facility is a system facility, or comma-separated list of facilities, and level is an indication of the severity of the condition being logged. Recognized values for facility include: user Messages generated by user processes. This is the default priority for messages from programs or facilities not listed in this file. kern Messages generated by the kernel. mail The mail system. daemon System daemons, such as in.ftpd(1M) auth The authorization system: login(1), su(1M), getty(1M), among others. lpr The line printer spooling system: lpr(1B), lpc(1B), among others. news Designated for the USENET network news system. uucp Designated for the UUCP system; it does not currently use the syslog mechanism. cron Designated for cron/at messages generated by systems that do logging through syslog. The current version of the Solaris Operating Environment does not use this facility for logging. audit Designated for audit messages generated by systems that audit by means of syslog. local0-7 Designated for local use. mark For timestamp messages produced internally by syslogd. * An asterisk indicates all facilities except for the mark facility. Recognized values for level are (in descending order of severity): emerg For panic conditions that would normally be broadcast to all users. alert For conditions that should be corrected immediately, such as a corrupted system database. crit For warnings about critical conditions, such as hard device errors. err For other errors. warning For warning messages. notice For conditions that are not error conditions, but may require special handling. A configuration entry with a level value of notice must appear on a separate line. info Informational messages. debug For messages that are normally used only when debugging a program. none Do not send messages from the indicated facility to the selected file. For example, a selector of *.debug;mail.none sends all messages except mail messages to the selected file. For a given facility and level, syslogd matches all messages for that level and all higher levels. For example, an entry that specifies a level of crit also logs messages at the alert and emerg levels. The action field indicates where to forward the message. Values for this field can have one of four forms: o A filename, beginning with a leading slash, which indicates that messages specified by the selector are to be written to the specified file. The file is opened in append mode if it exists. If the file does not exist, logging silently fails for this action. o The name of a remote host, prefixed with an @, as with: @server, which indicates that messages specified by the selector are to be forwarded to the syslogd on the named host. The hostname "loghost" is treated, in the default syslog.conf, as the hostname given to the machine that logs syslogd messages. Every machine is "loghost" by default, per the hosts database. It is also possible to specify one machine on a network to be "loghost" by, literally, naming the machine "loghost". If the local machine is designated to be "loghost", then syslogd messages are written to the appropriate files. Otherwise, they are sent to the machine "loghost" on the net- work. o A comma-separated list of usernames, which indicates that messages specified by the selector are to be written to the named users if they are logged in. o An asterisk, which indicates that messages specified by the selector are to be written to all logged-in users. Blank lines are ignored. Lines for which the first nonwhite character is a '#' are treated as comments. EXAMPLES
Example 1: A Sample Configuration File With the following configuration file: *.notice /var/log/notice mail.info /var/log/notice *.crit /var/log/critical kern,mark.debug /dev/console kern.err @server *.emerg * *.alert root,operator *.alert;auth.warning /var/log/auth syslogd(1M) logs all mail system messages except debug messages and all notice (or higher) messages into a file named /var/log/notice. It logs all critical messages into /var/log/critical, and all kernel messages and 20-minute marks onto the system console. Kernel messages of err (error) severity or higher are forwarded to the machine named server. Emergency messages are forwarded to all users. The users root and operator are informed of any alert messages. All messages from the authorization system of warning level or higher are logged in the file /var/log/auth. FILES
/var/log/notice log of all mail system messages (except debug messages) and all messages of notice level or higher /var/log/critical log of all critical messages /var/log/auth log of all messages from the authorization system of warning level or higher ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Stable | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
at(1), crontab(1), logger(1), login(1), lp(1), lpc(1B), lpr(1B), m4(1), cron(1M), getty(1M), in.ftpd(1M), su(1M), syslogd(1M), syslog(3C), hosts(4), attributes(5) SunOS 5.10 28 Jul 2004 syslog.conf(4)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:16 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy