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Full Discussion: Sudo to other user
Operating Systems AIX Sudo to other user Post 302847915 by bakunin on Wednesday 28th of August 2013 04:54:01 AM
Old 08-28-2013
First, you have to create a command-alias: the command(s) you want to allow. Than you have to create a user-alias: the (group of) user(s) you want to make use of the allowed commands. Finally you have to create a rule, where you state that the users in user-alias are allowed to execute the commands in command-alias. (I skipped the host-alias as this seems to be no issue here.)

That is the general outline of what you have to do. Please post these three definitions from your file /etc/sudoers here, then we can evaluate what you have done and what went wrong.

I hope this helps.

bakunin
 

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KDESU(1)							 KDE User's Manual							  KDESU(1)

NAME
kdesu - Runs a program with elevated privileges SYNOPSIS
kdesu [-c] [-d] [-f file] [-i icon name] [-n] [-p priority] [-r] [-s] [-t] [-u user] [--nonewdcop] [command [arg1] [arg2] [...]] kdesu [KDE Generic Options] [Qt Generic Options] DESCRIPTION
KDE su is a graphical front end for the UNIX(R) su command for the K Desktop Environment. It allows you to run a program as different user by supplying the password for that user. KDE su is an unprivileged program; it uses the system's su. KDE su has one additional feature: it can optionally remember passwords for you. If you are using this feature, you only need to enter the password once for each command. This program is meant to be started from the command line or from .desktop files. OPTIONS
-c program This specifies the program to run as root. It has to be passed in one argument. So if, for example, you want to start a new file manager, you would enter at the prompt: kdesu -c kfm -sw -d Show debug information. -f file This option allow efficient use of KDE su in .desktop files. It tells KDE su to examine the file specified by file. If this file is writable by the current user, KDE su will execute the command as the current user. If it is not writable, the command is executed as user user (defaults to root). file is evaluated like this: if file starts with a /, it is taken as an absolute filename. Otherwise, it is taken as the name of a global KDE configuration file. For example: to configure the K display manager, kdm, you could issue kdesu -c kdmconfig -f kdmrc -i icon name Specify icon to use in the password dialog. You may specify just the name, without any extension. -n Do not keep the password. This disables the keep password checkbox in the password dialog. -p priority Set priority value. The priority is an arbitrary number between 0 and 100, where 100 means highest priority, and 0 means lowest. The default is 50. -r Use realtime scheduling. -s Stop the kdesu daemon. This is the daemon that caches successful passwords in the background. This feature may also be disabled with -n when KDE su is initially run. -t Enable terminal output. This disables password keeping. This is largely for debugging purposes; if you want to run a console mode app, use the standard su instead. -u user While the most common use for KDE su is to run a command as the superuser, you can supply any user name and the appropriate pass- word. SEE ALSO
su(1) More detailed user documentation is available from help:/kdesu (either enter this URL into Konqueror, or run khelpcenter help:/kdesu). EXAMPLES
Run kfmclient as user jim, and show the Konqueror icon in the password dialog: kdesu -u jim -i konqueror kfmclient AUTHORS
KDE su was written by Geert Jansen <jansen@kde.org> and Pietro Iglio <iglio@fub.it>. AUTHOR
Lauri Watts. K Desktop Environment Jun 7, 2005 KDESU(1)
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