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Operating Systems Solaris Sudo without password Solaris 11.2 Post 302922683 by akame on Monday 27th of October 2014 05:58:33 PM
Old 10-27-2014
Sudo without password Solaris 11.2

Hi guys,

I have the strangest issue... might be a huge oversight.. who knows!! Smilie

I am trying to configure a user to use sudo with no password, here is my sudoers configuration file

Code:
root@isha:~# egrep -v "^$|^#" /etc/sudoers
root ALL=(ALL) ALL
%wheel ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
root@isha:~#

I login with user "kenneth", which is on the wheel group, but it requires password...

Code:
kenneth@isha:~$ id -a 
uid=100(kenneth) gid=10(staff) groups=10(staff),100(wheel)
kenneth@isha:~$ roles
root
kenneth@isha:~$ sudo -n su -
sudo: a password is required

so I check creating a new user called "ragnor", adding it to wheel as well, I added it to the root role too just in case, (I thought that was the cause at some point) but it works flawlessly..Smilie

Code:
ragnor@isha:~$ id -a 
uid=101(ragnor) gid=10(staff) groups=10(staff),100(wheel)
ragnor@isha:~$ roles
root
ragnor@isha:~$ sudo su - 
Oracle Corporation      SunOS 5.11      11.2    June 2014
You have new mail.
root@isha:~#

I also tried commenting out the "root ALL=(ALL) ALL" on sudoers, same results.

Any ideas?

Thanks.
 

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LOCKOUT(1)							      lockout								LOCKOUT(1)

NAME
lockout - avoid slacking and impose productivity and discipline on yourself WARNING
This program is VERY DANGEROUS. If it fails, you may end up not knowing the root password to your own computer (in which case you need to boot into single-user mode). There are no known reports of this actually happening, but we don't know how stupid you are. Also, you should probably not run this on a multi-user system. SYNOPSIS
lockout lock HhMm | Hh | Mm lockout lock HH:MM lockout lock HH:MMam | HH:MMpm lockout lock HHam | HHpm lockout lock lockout unlock [force] lockout status DESCRIPTION
Lockout is a tool that imposes discipline on you so that you get some work done. For example, lockout can be used to install a firewall that does not let you browse the Web. Lockout changes the root password for a specified duration; this prevents you from secretly ripping down the firewall and then browsing the Web anyway. In case of an emergency, you can reboot your computer to undo the effects of lockout and to restore the original root password. Obviously, lockout lock and lockout unlock can only be run by root. lockout status can be run by any user. lockout without any parameters shows a brief help message. lockout lock takes one optional parameter. If no parameter is given, you are dropped in interactive mode and asked for the duration of the lock or the time at which the lock should be lifted. You can also supply this as a parameter on the command line. Lockout understands various time formats. You can specify a delay, e.g., 3h (3 hours), 1h30m (1 hour and 30 minutes), or 90m (1 hour and 30 minutes), or you can specify absolute time, e.g., 2pm, 2:30am, 15:30, etc. You will be asked to confirm the time at which lockout will unlock your system. If you type "yes", lockout executes /etc/lockout/lock.sh and changes the root password to something completely random. /etc/lock- out/lock.sh is a shell script that you write. It takes measures to make sure you stop slacking. For example, it could install a firewall that prevents outgoing connections to port 80. See the "EXAMPLES" section below. lockout unlock takes an optional force parameter. Without any parameters, lockout lock will check whether it is time to unlock the system and, if so, executes /etc/lockout/unlock.sh, which is a shell script that you write. It should undo the effects of /etc/lockout/lock.sh, executed when the system was locked. If you pass the force parameter to lockout unlock, lockout will forcibly unlock your system, whether it was really time for that or not. lockout unlock should be called every minute by cron. See "CONFIGURATION". lockout status will print out the time at which the system is going to be unlocked. CONFIGURATION
/etc/cron.d/lockout must contain the following two entries: */1 * * * * root /usr/bin/lockout unlock >/dev/null 2>&1 @reboot root /usr/bin/lockout unlock force >/dev/null 2>&1 The examples that follow assume you are using sudo(8) and you have a file, /etc/lockout/sudoers.normal which is the normal /etc/sudoers file, and /etc/lockout/sudoers.lock, which is the /etc/sudoers file when lockout locks your computer. This example also assumes you are using iptables(8). /var/lib/iptables/active should contain your default firewall rules, and /var/lib/iptables/work should contain the firewall rules that enforce discipline. See below for an example. /etc/lock/lock.sh imposes discipline. For example: #!/bin/sh /etc/init.d/iptables load work cp /etc/lockout/sudoers.lock /etc/sudoers /etc/init.d/sudo stop /etc/init.d/sudo start /etc/lock/unlock.sh undoes these effects. For example: #!/bin/sh /etc/init.d/iptables restart cp /etc/lockout/sudoers.normal /etc/sudoers /etc/init.d/sudo stop /etc/init.d/sudo start Your /var/lib/iptables/work may look something like this: *filter :INPUT ACCEPT [1047:99548] :FORWARD ACCEPT [0:0] :OUTPUT ACCEPT [1104:120792] # allow incoming packets from localhost, ntp, # and existing connections -A INPUT -i lo -j ACCEPT -A INPUT -p udp -m udp --source-port ntp -m state --state ESTABLISHED -j ACCEPT -A INPUT -m state --state ESTABLISHED -j ACCEPT -A INPUT -p tcp -j DROP -A INPUT -p udp -j DROP # allow outgoing connections for email and DNS -A OUTPUT -d 127.0.0.1/8 -j ACCEPT -A OUTPUT -p tcp -m tcp --dport smtp -j ACCEPT -A OUTPUT -p tcp -m tcp --dport domain -j ACCEPT -A OUTPUT -p udp -m udp --dport domain -j ACCEPT -A OUTPUT -j DROP COMMIT EXAMPLES
lockout lock 2h30m [locks out for 2h and 30m] lockout lock 90m [locks out for 1h and 30m] lockout lock 3pm [locks out until 3pm] lockout lock 3:20am [locks out until 3:20am] lockout lock 15:20 [locks out until 3:20pm] lockout status [shows when the system is going to be unlocked] FILES
/etc/lockout/lock.sh: executed when running lockout lock /etc/lockout/unlock.sh: executed when running lockout unlock SEE ALSO
usermod(8), iptables(8), passwd(1), cron(8), crontab(1) BUGS
Arguably, a program that changes the root password to something random with the possibility of never recovering the original password might be considered a bug by itself. Other than that, no known bugs. AUTHOR
Thomer M. Gil, http://thomer.com/lockout/ lockout 2004-09-08 LOCKOUT(1)
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