No, I can't edit another user's profile. Actually I can since I'm root, but since the DBAs use it whenever they log on they'll be, well, rather "unsettled" if I change their logins for my use.
Thanks Derek. Unfortunately neither of your options worked. The "su" prompted me for a password, the sudo command still gave me the interactive menu (because of the -i). But I appreciate your feedback none-the-less.
I did figure it out, just this morning after bashing my head last night:
I was so close. What I had to do was to put all the environment variables (to get the stuff that the -i provided), such as sourcing the Oracle environments inside MY bash script instead of using their bash.profile. It works.
I'd like to get out of having the script run on the Oracle server, but instead pass all this TO the Oracle server from my source server (the one I'm ssh'ing from), but I know how to to that.
Thanks for the help guys, I do appreciate it!
Last edited by rbatte1; 01-27-2015 at 12:07 PM..
Reason: Added CODE tags
Hi there,
It might seem tricky, I confess.
We use sudo to allow people to initiate priviledged commands (but not all commands) on our Unix systems.
To by pass this, some people initiate the sudo su - command ;
The main issue is to 'know' what those people do when they gain root access.... (4 Replies)
QUESTION #1:
I have this in my .bashrc file:
alias rm='rm -i'
Problem is, there are 3 files that I remove many times a day and would like this command to ignore these 3 files. In other words, prompt me on everything EXCEPT these 3 files.
Is this possible?
QUESTION #2:
Also in... (16 Replies)
Guy's
I have sudo already installed in AIX , just I want to know how can I add for example the following commands to be executed by sudo by (appuser)..
shutdown
/usr/startapp.sh
/usr/stopapp.sh (5 Replies)
Is there a way to transfer my sudo password via ssh so that I can copy files remotely and pass them locally, so:
cat sudo-passwd-file|ssh -t user@10.7.0.180 'sudo find / -depth|cpio -oacv|gzip' > /path/to/dir/file.cpio.gz
I am in the process of a creating a script. Everytime I try and just... (16 Replies)
Hello all,
I manage some HP-UX 11.31 servers. I have some users that have sudo access. All of them belong to the 'sudoers' user group. Right now, sudo is configured as wide open:
%sudoers ALL=(ALL) ALL
We are using sudo mostly for auditing purposes - when a user wants to run a... (9 Replies)
I'm looking for a way to track commands that are run as root after a user runs sudo su - root. I have a profile set up for root that will track the commands by userid but if we change the shell it only stores it in that shells history file. (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am new to scripting. I am trying to write a script to ssh one remote machine and run a sudo command.
ssh <hostname> sudo -S <command> < ~/pass.txt
I am stored my password in pass.txt.
I am getting error
sudo: no tty present and no askpass program specified
Please suggest me how can... (1 Reply)
dear all,
When I start my laptop, I need to run one command /etc/init.open-afs start
and it require sudo privilege.
The only solution which occur to me is to put this command in .bashrc. But then the trouble comes as everytime I open any new tab it ask for the sudo password, which is pretty... (5 Replies)
All team members has sudo access to user "batch55".
Need to track all the commands used by team members after sudo to "batch55".
Using HP-UX and ksh shell in our environment.
How can i acheive this?
Thanks In Advance. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: venkatababu
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
gksu
GKSU(1) User Commands GKSU(1)NAME
gksu - GTK+ frontend for su and sudo
SYNOPSIS
gksu
gksu [-u <user>] [options] <command>
gksudo [-u <user>] [options] <command>
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly gksu and gksudo
gksu is a frontend to su and gksudo is a frontend to sudo. Their primary purpose is to run graphical commands that need root without the
need to run an X terminal emulator and using su directly.
Notice that all the magic is done by the underlying library, libgksu. Also notice that the library will decide if it should use su or sudo
as backend using the /apps/gksu/sudo-mode gconf key, if you call the gksu command. You can force the backend by using the gksudo command,
or by using the --sudo-mode and --su-mode options.
If no command is given, the gksu program will display a small window that allows you to type in a command to be run, and to select what
user the program should be run as. The other options are disregarded, right now, in this mode.
OPTIONS --debug, -d
Print information on the screen that might be useful for diagnosing and/or solving problems.
--user <user>, -u <user>
Call <command> as the specified user.
--disable-grab, -g
Disable the "locking" of the keyboard, mouse, and focus done by the program when asking for password.
--prompt, -P
Ask the user if they want to have their keyboard and mouse grabbed before doing so.
--preserve-env, -k
Preserve the current environments, does not set $HOME nor $PATH, for example.
--login, -l
Make this a login shell. Beware this may cause problems with the Xauthority magic. Run xhost to allow the target user to open win-
dows on your display!
--description <description|file>, -D <description|file>
Provide a descriptive name for the command to be used in the default message, making it nicer. You can also provide the absolute
path for a .desktop file. The Name key for will be used in this case.
--message <message>, -m <message>
Replace the standard message shown to ask for password for the argument passed to the option. Only use this if --description does
not suffice.
--print-pass, -p
Ask gksu to print the password to stdout, just like ssh-askpass. Useful to use in scripts with programs that accept receiving the
password on stdin.
--su-mode, -w
Force gksu to use su(1) as its backend for running the programs.
--sudo-mode, -S
Force gksu to use sudo(1) as its backend for running the programs.
SEE ALSO su(1), sudo(1)gksu version 2.0.x August 2006 GKSU(1)