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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Sudo reads password from a .cfg file Post 302956063 by Corona688 on Friday 25th of September 2015 11:20:01 AM
Old 09-25-2015
sudo will not read a password from file, ever. It's designed to prevent you from doing what you're trying to do, because it's a terribly insecure idea.

Configure sudo to allow you to run that specific script without a password instead.
 

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MOLLY-GUARD(8)							  [FIXME: manual]						    MOLLY-GUARD(8)

NAME
molly-guard - guard against accidental shutdowns/reboots SYNOPSIS
shutdown [-hV] [--molly-guard-do-nothing] [-- script_options] halt [-hV] [--molly-guard-do-nothing] [-- script_options] reboot [-hV] [--molly-guard-do-nothing] [-- script_options] poweroff [-hV] [--molly-guard-do-nothing] [-- script_options] DESCRIPTION
molly-guard attempts to prevent you from accidentally shutting down or rebooting machines. It does this by injecting a couple of checks before the existing commands: halt, reboot, shutdown, and poweroff. This happens via scripts with the same names in /usr/sbin, so it only works if you have /usr/sbin before /sbin in your PATH! Before molly-guard invokes the real command, all scripts in /etc/molly-guard/run.d/ have to run and exit successfully; else, it aborts the command. run-parts(1) is used to process the directory. molly-guard passes any script_options to the scripts, and also populates the environment with the following variables: o MOLLYGUARD_CMD - the actual command invoked by the user. o MOLLYGUARD_DO_NOTHING - set to 1 if this is a demo-run. o MOLLYGUARD_SETTINGS - the path to a shell script snippet which scripts can source to obtain settings. molly-guard prints the contents of /etc/molly-guard/messages.d/COMMAND or /etc/molly-guard/messages.d/default to the console, if either exists. This is due to /etc/molly-guard/run.d/10-print-message. GUARDING SSH SESSIONS
molly-guard was primarily designed to shield SSH connections. This functionality (which should arguably be provided by the openssh-server package) is implemented in /etc/molly-guard/run.d/30-query-hostname. This script first tests whether the command is being executed from a tty which has been created by sshd. It also checks whether the variable SSH_CONNECTION is defined. If any of these tests are successful, test script queries the user for the machine's hostname, which should be sufficient to prevent the user from doing something by accident. You can pass the --pretend-ssh script option to molly-guard to pretend that those tests succeeds. Alternatively, setting ALWAYS_QUERY_HOSTNAME in /etc/molly-guard/rc causes the script to always query. The following situations are still UNGUARDED. If you can think of ways to protect against those, please let me know! o running sudo within screen or screen within sudo; sudo eats the SSH_CONNECTION variable, and screen creates a new pty. o executing those command in a remote terminal window, that is a XTerm started on a remote machine but displaying on the local X server. You have been warned. You can use the --molly-guard-do-nothing switch to prevent anything from happening, e.g. halt --molly-guard-do-nothing. OPTIONS
--molly-guard-do-nothing Cause molly-guard to print the command which would be executed, after processing all scripts, instead of executing it. -h, --help Display usage information. -V, --version Display version information. SEE ALSO
shutdown(8), halt(1), reboot(8), poweroff(8). LEGALESE
molly-guard is copyright by martin f. krafft. Andrew Ruthven came up with the idea of using the scripts directory and submitted a patch, which I modified a bit. This manual page was written by martin f. krafft madduck@madduck.net. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the Artistic License 2.0 COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2008 martin f. krafft [FIXME: source] Apr 19, 2008 MOLLY-GUARD(8)
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