In /etc/sudoers, you should be able to find a line or lines that look like
If you add the user to the wheel group (in /etc/group) when creating the id they will get sudo privs automatically. The useradd option
will add secondary groups for a user at id creation.
Having a "running low on coffee" moment here & need help.
On HP 11.11 where is the sudoers file located; I looked every place I could think of and don't see it.
Thanks in advance:confused: (2 Replies)
Hi,
on solaris 10, I have two users : user1 and user2
I want to create User_Alias and Cmnd_Alias to allow them to execute a command without prompting for sudo password.
command I want these users should be able to run is '/usr/bin/su - abcd' . Also user1 and 2 need not type the 'abcd'... (6 Replies)
Hello,
I read and search through this wonderful forum and tried different approaches but it seems I lack some knowledge and neurones ^^
Here is what I'm trying to achieve :
file1:
test filea 3495;
test fileb 4578;
test filec 7689;
test filey 9978;
test filez 12300;
file2:
test filea... (11 Replies)
i just installed/configured apache2.0 on my own aix5.3 mini server. i can start/stop apache by root, but i want to start it under my login id(admin) instead.
i need to execute this command:
/usr/bin/sudo /usr/IBM/HTTPServer/bin/apachectl stop/start. (5 Replies)
this is for the first time i am going to use sudoers i want know how to create sudoers and giving privileges for that users
thanks in advance
dinu (6 Replies)
what is the configuration file for sudo? can we edit it as like other file or will it create any adverse effect on editing that file?
thanks in advance
dinu (1 Reply)
Dear folks.
Considering PCIDSS standards, i have requirment to use sudo(ers) to log everything a certain user executes with root privileges.
Now, for an admin it's just a pain in the ass to prefix every command with sudo.
Only way i can think of is making .aliases and with some awk magic... (6 Replies)
Hi everyone!
I am new to the forum and have recently started working with Linux.
Quick question, I want a user list in alphabetical order as the output of a shell script.
Who can help me!?
Thanks!
From the netherlands ;) (5 Replies)
Hi
using Solaris 10. trying to update /etc/sudoers file
I need to add all the fist level operation team. This is what I have but it doesn't seem to work. Please help.Error message
sudo su -
>>> sudoers file: parse error, line 9 <<<
>>> sudoers file: parse error, line 9 <<<
... (2 Replies)
Having a bit of a discussion with a software vendor about this. Can anyone confirm my understanding?
/etc/sudoers file example:-
user1 server1 = NOPASSWD:/usr/bin/ls -l
user1 server1 = NOPASSWD:/usr/bin/file
But then the following command fails (logged in on server 1 as user1) because... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: psychocandy
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
pam_wheel
PAM_WHEEL(8) Linux-PAM Manual PAM_WHEEL(8)NAME
pam_wheel - Only permit root access to members of group wheel
SYNOPSIS
pam_wheel.so [debug] [deny] [group=name] [root_only] [trust]
DESCRIPTION
The pam_wheel PAM module is used to enforce the so-called wheel group. By default it permits root access to the system if the applicant
user is a member of the wheel group. If no group with this name exist, the module is using the group with the group-ID 0.
OPTIONS
debug
Print debug information.
deny
Reverse the sense of the auth operation: if the user is trying to get UID 0 access and is a member of the wheel group (or the group of
the group option), deny access. Conversely, if the user is not in the group, return PAM_IGNORE (unless trust was also specified, in
which case we return PAM_SUCCESS).
group=name
Instead of checking the wheel or GID 0 groups, use the name group to perform the authentication.
root_only
The check for wheel membership is done only.
trust
The pam_wheel module will return PAM_SUCCESS instead of PAM_IGNORE if the user is a member of the wheel group (thus with a little play
stacking the modules the wheel members may be able to su to root without being prompted for a passwd).
MODULE TYPES PROVIDED
The auth and account module types are provided.
RETURN VALUES
PAM_AUTH_ERR
Authentication failure.
PAM_BUF_ERR
Memory buffer error.
PAM_IGNORE
The return value should be ignored by PAM dispatch.
PAM_PERM_DENY
Permission denied.
PAM_SERVICE_ERR
Cannot determine the user name.
PAM_SUCCESS
Success.
PAM_USER_UNKNOWN
User not known.
EXAMPLES
The root account gains access by default (rootok), only wheel members can become root (wheel) but Unix authenticate non-root applicants.
su auth sufficient pam_rootok.so
su auth required pam_wheel.so
su auth required pam_unix.so
SEE ALSO pam.conf(5), pam.d(5), pam(7)AUTHOR
pam_wheel was written by Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>.
Linux-PAM Manual 05/31/2011 PAM_WHEEL(8)