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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting any way to use SU command without prompt for password Post 43406 by myelvis on Monday 17th of November 2003 09:24:52 AM
Old 11-17-2003
Hi guys ,

Thanks for the reply and sorry for not letting you the flavour of UNIX i am working on ..

I am on SUN solaris 5.7 ....

I do have the sudo installed but don't have access to view the /etc/sudoers file .

My point is if i am authorize to do a particular thing then i should be able to do it within my login ... Looking for a way to do it ...

I will take care of the security issue ....
See if u can help me out
c ya
 

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pam_timestamp(8)					   System Administrator's Manual					  pam_timestamp(8)

NAME
pam_timestamp - authenticate using cached successful authentication attempts SYNOPSIS
auth sufficient /lib/security/pam_timestamp.so session optional /lib/security/pam_timestamp.so DESCRIPTION
In a nutshell, pam_timestamp caches successful authentication attempts, and allows you to use a recent successful attempt as the basis for authentication. When an application opens a session using pam_timestamp, a timestamp file is created in the timestampdir directory for the user. When an application attempts to authenticate the user, a pam_timestamp will treat a sufficiently- recent timestamp file as grounds for succeeding. ARGUMENTS
debug turns on debugging via syslog(3). timestampdir=name tells pam_timestamp.so where to place and search for timestamp files. This should match the directory configured for sudo(1) in the sudoers(5) file. timestamp_timeout=number tells pam_timestamp.so how long it should treat timestamp files as valid after their last modification date. This should match the value configured for sudo(1) in the sudoers(5) file. verbose attempt to inform the user when access is granted. EXAMPLE
/etc/pam.d/some-config-tool: auth sufficient /lib/security/pam_timestamp.so verbose auth required /lib/security/pam_unix.so session required /lib/security/pam_permit.so session optional /lib/security/pam_timestamp.so CAVEATS
Users can get confused when they aren't always asked for passwords when running a given program. Some users reflexively begin typing information before noticing that it's not being asked for. SEE ALSO
pam_timestamp_check(8) BUGS
Let's hope not, but if you find any, please email the author. AUTHOR
Nalin Dahyabhai <nalin@redhat.com> Red Hat Linux 2002/02/07 pam_timestamp(8)
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