SUDO(8) | System Manager's Manual | SUDO(8) |
sudo
, sudoedit
— execute a command as another user
sudo |
-h | -K |
-k | -V |
sudo |
-v [-ABkNnS ]
[-g group]
[-h host]
[-p prompt]
[-u user] |
sudo |
-l [-ABkNnS ]
[-g group]
[-h host]
[-p prompt]
[-U user]
[-u user]
[command [arg ...]] |
sudo |
[-ABbEHnPS ] [-C
num] [-D
directory] [-g
group] [-h
host] [-p
prompt] [-R
directory] [-r
role] [-t
type] [-T
timeout] [-u
user]
[VAR=value]
[-i | -s ]
[command [arg ...]] |
sudoedit |
[-ABkNnS ] [-C
num] [-D
directory] [-g
group] [-h
host] [-p
prompt] [-R
directory] [-r
role] [-t
type] [-T
timeout] [-u
user] file ... |
sudo
allows a permitted user to execute a
command as the superuser or another user, as specified
by the security policy. The invoking user's real
(not
effective) user-ID is used to determine the user
name with which to query the security policy.
sudo
supports a plugin architecture for
security policies, auditing, and input/output logging. Third parties can
develop and distribute their own plugins to work seamlessly with the
sudo
front-end. The default security policy is
sudoers, which is configured via the file
/etc/sudoers, or via LDAP. See the
Plugins section for more information.
The security policy determines what privileges, if any, a user has
to run sudo
. The policy may require that users
authenticate themselves with a password or another authentication mechanism.
If authentication is required, sudo
will exit if the
user's password is not entered within a configurable time limit. This limit
is policy-specific; the default password prompt timeout for the
sudoers security policy is 0 minutes.
Security policies may support credential
caching to allow the user to run sudo
again for a
period of time without requiring authentication. By default, the
sudoers policy caches credentials on a per-terminal basis
for 15 minutes. See the timestamp_type and
timestamp_timeout
options in sudoers(5) for more information. By running
sudo
with the -v
option, a
user can update the cached credentials without running a
command.
On systems where sudo
is the primary
method of gaining superuser privileges, it is imperative to avoid syntax
errors in the security policy configuration files. For the default security
policy, sudoers(5), changes to the configuration files
should be made using the visudo(8) utility which will
ensure that no syntax errors are introduced.
When invoked as sudoedit
, the
-e
option (described below), is implied.
Security policies and audit plugins may log successful and failed
attempts to run sudo
. If an I/O plugin is
configured, the running command's input and output may
be logged as well.
The options are as follows:
-A
,
--askpass
sudo
requires a password, it will
read it from the user's terminal. If the -A
(askpass)
option is specified, a (possibly graphical) helper program is executed to
read the user's password and output the password to the standard output.
If the SUDO_ASKPASS
environment variable is set,
it specifies the path to the helper program. Otherwise, if
sudo.conf(5) contains a line specifying the askpass
program, that value will be used. For example:
# Path to askpass helper program Path askpass /usr/X11R6/bin/ssh-askpass
If no askpass program is available,
sudo
will exit with an error.
-B
,
--bell
-b
,
--background
sudo
. Most interactive
commands will fail to work properly in background
mode.-C
num,
--close-from
=numsudo
will close all open file
descriptors other than standard input, standard output, and standard error
when executing a command. The security policy may
restrict the user's ability to use this option. The
sudoers policy only permits use of the
-C
option when the administrator has enabled the
closefrom_override
option.-D
directory,
--chdir
=directory-E
,
--preserve-env
--preserve-env=list
-e
,
--edit
SUDO_EDITOR
, VISUAL
and EDITOR
environment variables (in that
order). If none of SUDO_EDITOR
,
VISUAL
or EDITOR
are
set, the first program listed in the
editor
sudoers(5) option is used.To help prevent the editing of unauthorized files, the following restrictions are enforced unless explicitly allowed by the security policy:
Users are never allowed to edit device special files.
If the specified file does not exist, it will be created.
Unlike most commands run by
sudo, the editor is run with the invoking user's
environment unmodified. If the temporary file becomes empty after
editing, the user will be prompted before it is installed. If, for some
reason, sudo
is unable to update a file with its
edited version, the user will receive a warning and the edited copy will
remain in a temporary file.
-g
group,
--group
=group#
’ character (e.g.,
‘#0
’ for GID 0). When running a
command as a GID, many shells require that the
‘#
’ be escaped with a backslash
(‘\
’). If no
-u
option is specified, the
command will be run as the invoking user. In either
case, the primary group will be set to group. The
sudoers policy permits any of the target user's groups
to be specified via the -g
option as long as the
-P
option is not in use.-H
,
--set-home
HOME
environment variable to the home directory specified by the target user's
password database entry. Depending on the policy, this may be the default
behavior.-h
,
--help
-h
host,
--host
=host-l
option
to list a user's privileges for the remote host.-i
,
--login
-c
option. The command and any
args are concatenated, separated by spaces, after
escaping each character (including white space) with a backslash
(‘\
’) except for alphanumerics,
underscores, hyphens, and dollar signs. If no
command is specified, an interactive shell is
executed. sudo
attempts to change to that user's
home directory before running the shell. The command
is run with an environment similar to the one a user would receive at log
in. Most shells behave differently when a command is
specified as compared to an interactive session; consult the shell's
manual for details. The
Command
environment section in the sudoers(5) manual
documents how the -i
option affects the
environment in which a command is run when the
sudoers policy is in use.-K
,
--remove-timestamp
-k
option, except that it removes
every cached credential for the user, regardless of the terminal or parent
process ID. The next time sudo
is run, a password
must be entered if the security policy requires authentication. It is not
possible to use the -K
option in conjunction with
a command or other option. This option does not
require a password. Not all security policies support credential
caching.-k
,
--reset-timestamp
sudo
is run in the session, a password must be
entered if the security policy requires authentication. By default, the
sudoers
policy uses a separate record in the
credential cache for each terminal (or parent process ID if no terminal is
present). This prevents the -k
option from
interfering with sudo
commands run in a different
terminal session. See the timestamp_type option in
sudoers(5) for more information. This option does not
require a password, and was added to allow a user to revoke
sudo
permissions from a
.logout file.
When used in conjunction with a command
or an option that may require a password, this option will cause
sudo
to ignore the user's cached credentials. As
a result, sudo
will prompt for a password (if
one is required by the security policy) and will not update the user's
cached credentials.
Not all security policies support credential caching.
-l
,
--list
-U
option) on the current host. A longer list
format is used if this option is specified multiple times and the security
policy supports a verbose output format.
If a command is specified and is
permitted by the security policy, the fully-qualified path to the
command is displayed along with any
args. If a command is
specified but not allowed by the policy, sudo
will exit with a status value of 1.
-N
,
--no-update
-k
flag, existing cached
credentials are used if they are valid. To detect when the user's cached
credentials are valid (or when no authentication is required), the
following can be used:
sudo -Nnv
Not all security policies support credential caching.
-n
,
--non-interactive
sudo
will display an error message and exit.-P
,
--preserve-groups
-p
prompt,
--prompt
=prompt%
’) escape sequences are
supported by the sudoers policy:
-u
option is also specified)%
’ characters
are collapsed into a single ‘%
’
characterThe custom prompt will override the
default prompt specified by either the security policy or the
SUDO_PROMPT
environment variable. On systems
that use PAM, the custom prompt will also override the prompt specified
by a PAM module unless the
passprompt_override
flag is disabled in sudoers.
-R
directory,
--chroot
=directory-r
role,
--role
=role-S
,
--stdin
-s
,
--shell
SHELL
environment
variable if it is set or the shell specified by the invoking user's
password database entry. If a command is specified,
it is passed to the shell as a simple command using the
-c
option. The command and
any args are concatenated, separated by spaces,
after escaping each character (including white space) with a backslash
(‘\
’) except for alphanumerics,
underscores, hyphens, and dollar signs. If no
command is specified, an interactive shell is
executed. Most shells behave differently when a
command is specified as compared to an interactive
session; consult the shell's manual for details.-t
type,
--type
=type-U
user,
--other-user
=user-l
option to list the
privileges for user instead of for the invoking
user. The security policy may restrict listing other users' privileges.
When using the sudoers policy, the
-U
option is restricted to the root user and users
with either the “list” priviege for the specified
user or the ability to run any
command as root or user on the
current host.-T
timeout,
--command-timeout
=timeout-u
user,
--user
=user#
’
character (e.g., ‘#0
’ for UID 0).
When running commands as a UID, many shells require
that the ‘#
’ be escaped with a
backslash (‘\
’). Some security
policies may restrict UIDs to those listed in the password database. The
sudoers policy allows UIDs that are not in the password
database as long as the targetpw option is not set.
Other security policies may not support this.-V
,
--version
sudo
version string as well as the
version string of any configured plugins. If the invoking user is already
root, the -V
option will display the options
passed to configure when sudo
was built; plugins
may display additional information such as default options.-v
,
--validate
sudo
timeout for another 15 minutes by default,
but does not run a command. Not all security
policies support cached credentials.--
--
is used to delimit the end of the
sudo
options. Subsequent options are passed to the
command.Options that take a value may only be specified once unless
otherwise indicated in the description. This is to help guard against
problems caused by poorly written scripts that invoke
sudo
with user-controlled input.
Environment variables to be set for the
command may also be passed as options to
sudo
in the form
VAR=value, for example
LD_LIBRARY_PATH
=/usr/local/pkg/lib.
Environment variables may be subject to restrictions imposed by the security
policy plugin. The sudoers policy subjects environment
variables passed as options to the same restrictions as existing environment
variables with one important difference. If the
setenv option is
set in sudoers, the command to be
run has the SETENV
tag set or the
command matched is
ALL, the
user may set variables that would otherwise be forbidden. See
sudoers(5) for more information.
When sudo
executes a
command, the security policy specifies the execution
environment for the command. Typically, the real and
effective user and group and IDs are set to match those of the target user,
as specified in the password database, and the group vector is initialized
based on the group database (unless the -P
option
was specified).
The following parameters may be specified by security policy:
There are two distinct ways sudo
can run a
command.
If an I/O logging plugin is configured to log terminal I/O, or if
the security policy explicitly requests it, a new pseudo-terminal
(“pty”) is allocated and fork(2) is used to
create a second sudo
process, referred to as the
monitor. The monitor creates a new
terminal session with itself as the leader and the pty as its controlling
terminal, calls fork(2) again, sets up the execution
environment as described above, and then uses the
execve(2) system call to run the
command in the child process. The
monitor exists to relay job control signals between the
user's terminal and the pty the command is being run
in. This makes it possible to suspend and resume the
command normally. Without the
monitor, the command would be in
what POSIX terms an “orphaned process group” and it would not
receive any job control signals from the kernel. When the
command exits or is terminated by a signal, the
monitor passes the command's exit
status to the main sudo
process and exits. After
receiving the command's exit status, the main
sudo
process passes the
command's exit status to the security policy's close
function, as well as the close function of any configured audit plugin, and
exits.
If no pty is used, sudo
calls
fork(2), sets up the execution environment as described
above, and uses the execve(2) system call to run the
command in the child process. The main
sudo
process waits until the
command has completed, then passes the
command's exit status to the security policy's close
function, as well as the close function of any configured audit plugins, and
exits. As a special case, if the policy plugin does not define a close
function, sudo
will execute the
command directly instead of calling
fork(2) first. The sudoers policy plugin
will only define a close function when I/O logging is enabled, a pty is
required, an SELinux role is specified, the command
has an associated timeout, or the pam_session or
pam_setcred options are enabled. Both
pam_session and pam_setcred are enabled
by default on systems using PAM.
On systems that use PAM, the security policy's close function is responsible for closing the PAM session. It may also log the command's exit status.
When the command is run as a child of the
sudo
process, sudo
will
relay signals it receives to the command. The
SIGINT
and SIGQUIT
signals
are only relayed when the command is being run in a
new pty or when the signal was sent by a user process, not the kernel. This
prevents the command from receiving
SIGINT
twice each time the user enters control-C.
Some signals, such as SIGSTOP
and
SIGKILL
, cannot be caught and thus will not be
relayed to the command. As a general rule,
SIGTSTP
should be used instead of
SIGSTOP
when you wish to suspend a
command being run by sudo
.
As a special case, sudo
will not
relay signals that were sent by the command it is
running. This prevents the command from accidentally
killing itself. On some systems, the reboot(8) utility
sends SIGTERM
to all non-system processes other than
itself before rebooting the system. This prevents
sudo
from relaying the
SIGTERM
signal it received back to
reboot(8), which might then exit before the system was
actually rebooted, leaving it in a half-dead state similar to single user
mode. Note, however, that this check only applies to the
command run by sudo
and not
any other processes that the command may create. As a
result, running a script that calls reboot(8) or
shutdown(8) via sudo
may cause the
system to end up in this undefined state unless the
reboot(8) or shutdown(8) are run using
the exec
()
family of functions instead of
system
()
(which interposes a shell between the command and the
calling process).
Plugins may be specified via Plugin directives
in the sudo.conf(5) file. They may be loaded as dynamic
shared objects (on systems that support them), or compiled directly into the
sudo
binary. If no sudo.conf(5)
file is present, or if it doesn't contain any Plugin
lines, sudo
will use sudoers(5)
for the policy, auditing, and I/O logging plugins. See the
sudo.conf(5) manual for details of the
/etc/sudo.conf file and the
sudo_plugin(5) manual for more information about the
sudo
plugin architecture.
Upon successful execution of a command, the
exit status from sudo
will be the exit status of the
program that was executed. If the command terminated
due to receipt of a signal, sudo
will send itself
the same signal that terminated the command.
If the -l
option was specified without a
command, sudo
will exit with a
value of 0 if the user is allowed to run sudo
and
they authenticated successfully (as required by the security policy). If a
command is specified with the
-l
option, the exit value will only be 0 if the
command is permitted by the security policy, otherwise
it will be 1.
If there is an authentication failure, a configuration/permission
problem, or if the given command cannot be executed,
sudo
exits with a value of 1. In the latter case,
the error string is printed to the standard error. If
sudo
cannot stat(2) one or more
entries in the user's PATH
, an error is printed to
the standard error. (If the directory does not exist or if it is not really
a directory, the entry is ignored and no error is printed.) This should not
happen under normal circumstances. The most common reason for
stat(2) to return “permission denied” is if
you are running an automounter and one of the directories in your
PATH
is on a machine that is currently
unreachable.
sudo
tries to be safe when executing
external commands.
To prevent command spoofing, sudo
checks
"." and "" (both denoting current directory) last when
searching for a command in the user's
PATH
(if one or both are in the
PATH
). Depending on the security policy, the user's
PATH
environment variable may be modified, replaced,
or passed unchanged to the program that sudo
executes.
Users should
never be granted
sudo
privileges to execute files that are writable
by the user or that reside in a directory that is writable by the user. If
the user can modify or replace the command there is no
way to limit what additional commands they can
run.
By default, sudo
will only
log the command it explicitly runs. If a user runs a
command such as ‘sudo
su
’ or ‘sudo sh
’,
subsequent commands run from that shell are not
subject to sudo
's security policy. The same is true
for commands that offer shell escapes (including most
editors). If I/O logging is enabled, subsequent
commands will have their input and/or output logged,
but there will not be traditional logs for those
commands. Because of this, care must be taken when
giving users access to commands via
sudo
to verify that the
command does not inadvertently give the user an
effective root shell. For information on ways to address this, see the
Preventing shell
escapes section in sudoers(5).
To prevent the disclosure of potentially sensitive information,
sudo
disables core dumps by default while it is
executing (they are re-enabled for the command that is
run). This historical practice dates from a time when most operating systems
allowed set-user-ID processes to dump core by default. To aid in debugging
sudo
crashes, you may wish to re-enable core dumps
by setting “disable_coredump” to false in the
sudo.conf(5) file as follows:
Set disable_coredump false
See the sudo.conf(5) manual for more information.
sudo
utilizes the following environment
variables. The security policy has control over the actual content of the
command's environment.
EDITOR
-e
(sudoedit) mode if
neither SUDO_EDITOR
nor
VISUAL
is set.MAIL
-i
option is specified, or when
env_reset is enabled in sudoers
(unless MAIL
is present in the
env_keep list).HOME
-i
or -H
options are
specified, when the -s
option is specified and
set_home
is set in sudoers, when
always_set_home
is enabled in sudoers, or when
env_reset is enabled in sudoers and
HOME
is not present in the
env_keep list.LOGNAME
-i
option is specified, when the
set_logname
option is enabled in sudoers, or when the
env_reset option is enabled in sudoers
(unless LOGNAME
is present in the
env_keep list).PATH
SHELL
-s
option.SUDO_ASKPASS
-A
option is
specified.SUDO_COMMAND
SUDO_EDITOR
-e
(sudoedit) mode.SUDO_GID
SUDO_PROMPT
-p
option was specified.SUDO_PS1
PS1
will be set to its value for the
program being run.SUDO_UID
SUDO_USER
USER
LOGNAME
, described
above.VISUAL
-e
(sudoedit) mode if
SUDO_EDITOR
is not set.sudo
front-end configurationThe following examples assume a properly configured security policy.
To get a file listing of an unreadable directory:
$ sudo ls /usr/local/protected
To list the home directory of user yaz on a machine where the file system holding ~yaz is not exported as root:
$ sudo -u yaz ls ~yaz
To edit the index.html file as user www:
$ sudoedit -u www ~www/htdocs/index.html
To view system logs only accessible to root and users in the adm group:
$ sudo -g adm more /var/log/syslog
To run an editor as jim with a different primary group:
$ sudoedit -u jim -g audio ~jim/sound.txt
To shut down a machine:
$ sudo shutdown -r +15 "quick reboot"
To make a usage listing of the directories in the /home partition.
The commands are run in a sub-shell to allow the
‘cd
’ command and file redirection to
work.
$ sudo sh -c "cd /home ; du -s * | sort -rn > USAGE"
Error messages produced by sudo
include:
editing
files in a writable directory is not permitted
sudoedit
does not permit editing a
file when any of the parent directories are writable by the invoking user.
This avoids a race condition that could allow the user to overwrite an
arbitrary file. See the
sudoedit_checkdir
option in sudoers(5) for more information.editing
symbolic links is not permitted
sudoedit
does not follow symbolic
links when opening files. See the
sudoedit_follow
option in sudoers(5) for more information.effective
uid is not 0, is sudo installed setuid root?
sudo
was not run with root privileges. The
sudo
binary must be owned by the root user and
have the set-user-ID bit set. Also, it must not be located on a file
system mounted with the ‘nosuid’ option or on an NFS file
system that maps uid 0 to an unprivileged uid.effective
uid is not 0, is sudo on a file system with the 'nosuid' option set or an
NFS file system without root privileges?
sudo
was not run with root privileges. The
sudo
binary has the proper owner and permissions
but it still did not run with root privileges. The most common reason for
this is that the file system the sudo
binary is
located on is mounted with the ‘nosuid’ option or it is an
NFS file system that maps uid 0 to an unprivileged uid.fatal
error, unable to load plugins
invalid
environment variable name
-E
option contained an equal sign
(‘=
’). The arguments to the
-E
option should be environment variable names
without an associated value.no password was
provided
sudo
tried to read the password, it did not
receive any characters. This may happen if no terminal is available (or
the -S
option is specified) and the standard input
has been redirected from /dev/null.a terminal is
required to read the password
sudo
needs to read the password but there is no
mechanism available for it to do so. A terminal is not present to read the
password from, sudo
has not been configured to
read from the standard input, the -S
option was
not used, and no askpass helper has been specified either via the
sudo.conf(5) file or the
SUDO_ASKPASS
environment variable.no writable
temporary directory found
sudoedit
was unable to find a usable temporary
directory in which to store its intermediate files.The
“no new privileges” flag is set, which prevents sudo from
running as root.sudo
was run by a process that has the Linux
“no new privileges” flag is set. This causes the set-user-ID
bit to be ignored when running an executable, which will prevent
sudo
from functioning. The most likely cause for
this is running sudo
within a container that sets
this flag. Check the documentation to see if it is possible to configure
the container such that the flag is not set.sudo must be
owned by uid 0 and have the setuid bit set
sudo
was not run with root privileges. The
sudo
binary does not have the correct owner or
permissions. It must be owned by the root user and have the set-user-ID
bit set.sudoedit
is not supported on this platform
sudoedit
on systems
that support setting the effective user-ID.timed out
reading password
you do not
exist in the passwd database
you may not
specify environment variables in edit mode
su(1), stat(2), login_cap(3), passwd(5), sudo.conf(5), sudo_plugin(5), sudoers(5), sudoers_timestamp(5), sudoreplay(8), visudo(8)
See the HISTORY.md file in the sudo
distribution (https://www.sudo.ws/about/history/) for a brief history of
sudo.
Many people have worked on sudo
over the
years; this version consists of code written primarily by:
See the CONTRIBUTORS.md file in the sudo
distribution (https://www.sudo.ws/about/contributors/) for an exhaustive
list of people who have contributed to sudo
.
There is no easy way to prevent a user from gaining a root shell
if that user is allowed to run arbitrary commands via
sudo
. Also, many programs (such as editors) allow
the user to run commands via shell escapes, thus
avoiding sudo
's checks. However, on most systems it
is possible to prevent shell escapes with the sudoers(5)
plugin's
noexec
functionality.
It is not meaningful to run the
‘cd
’ command
directly via sudo, e.g.,
$ sudo cd /usr/local/protected
since when the command exits the parent
process (your shell) will still be the same. The -D
option can be used to run a command in a specific
directory.
Running shell scripts via sudo
can expose
the same kernel bugs that make set-user-ID shell scripts unsafe on some
operating systems (if your OS has a /dev/fd/ directory, set-user-ID shell
scripts are generally safe).
If you believe you have found a bug in
sudo
, you can submit a bug report at
https://bugzilla.sudo.ws/
Limited free support is available via the sudo-users mailing list, see https://www.sudo.ws/mailman/listinfo/sudo-users to subscribe or search the archives.
sudo
is provided “AS IS” and
any express or implied warranties, including, but not limited to, the
implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose
are disclaimed. See the LICENSE.md file distributed with
sudo
or https://www.sudo.ws/about/license/ for
complete details.
January 16, 2023 | Sudo 1.9.13p3 |