1SUDO(8)                   BSD System Manager's Manual                  SUDO(8)
2

NAME

4     sudo, sudoedit — execute a command as another user
5

SYNOPSIS

7     sudo -h | -K | -k | -V
8     sudo -v [-AknS] [-g group] [-h host] [-p prompt] [-u user]
9     sudo -l [-AknS] [-g group] [-h host] [-p prompt] [-U user] [-u user]
10          [command]
11     sudo [-AbEHnPS] [-C num] [-g group] [-h host] [-p prompt] [-r role]
12          [-t type] [-T timeout] [-u user] [VAR=value] [-i | -s] [command]
13     sudoedit [-AknS] [-C num] [-g group] [-h host] [-p prompt] [-T timeout]
14          [-u user] file ...
15

DESCRIPTION

17     sudo allows a permitted user to execute a command as the superuser or
18     another user, as specified by the security policy.  The invoking user's
19     real (not effective) user ID is used to determine the user name with
20     which to query the security policy.
21
22     sudo supports a plugin architecture for security policies and input/out‐
23     put logging.  Third parties can develop and distribute their own policy
24     and I/O logging plugins to work seamlessly with the sudo front end.  The
25     default security policy is sudoers, which is configured via the file
26     /etc/sudoers, or via LDAP.  See the Plugins section for more information.
27
28     The security policy determines what privileges, if any, a user has to run
29     sudo.  The policy may require that users authenticate themselves with a
30     password or another authentication mechanism.  If authentication is
31     required, sudo will exit if the user's password is not entered within a
32     configurable time limit.  This limit is policy-specific; the default
33     password prompt timeout for the sudoers security policy is 5 minutes.
34
35     Security policies may support credential caching to allow the user to run
36     sudo again for a period of time without requiring authentication.  The
37     sudoers policy caches credentials for 5 minutes, unless overridden in
38     sudoers(5).  By running sudo with the -v option, a user can update the
39     cached credentials without running a command.
40
41     When invoked as sudoedit, the -e option (described below), is implied.
42
43     Security policies may log successful and failed attempts to use sudo.  If
44     an I/O plugin is configured, the running command's input and output may
45     be logged as well.
46
47     The options are as follows:
48
49     -A, --askpass
50                 Normally, if sudo requires a password, it will read it from
51                 the user's terminal.  If the -A (askpass) option is speci‐
52                 fied, a (possibly graphical) helper program is executed to
53                 read the user's password and output the password to the stan‐
54                 dard output.  If the SUDO_ASKPASS environment variable is
55                 set, it specifies the path to the helper program.  Otherwise,
56                 if sudo.conf(5) contains a line specifying the askpass pro‐
57                 gram, that value will be used.  For example:
58
59                     # Path to askpass helper program
60                     Path askpass /usr/X11R6/bin/ssh-askpass
61
62                 If no askpass program is available, sudo will exit with an
63                 error.
64
65     -b, --background
66                 Run the given command in the background.  Note that it is not
67                 possible to use shell job control to manipulate background
68                 processes started by sudo.  Most interactive commands will
69                 fail to work properly in background mode.
70
71     -C num, --close-from=num
72                 Close all file descriptors greater than or equal to num
73                 before executing a command.  Values less than three are not
74                 permitted.  By default, sudo will close all open file
75                 descriptors other than standard input, standard output and
76                 standard error when executing a command.  The security policy
77                 may restrict the user's ability to use this option.  The
78                 sudoers policy only permits use of the -C option when the
79                 administrator has enabled the closefrom_override option.
80
81     -E, --preserve-env
82                 Indicates to the security policy that the user wishes to pre‐
83                 serve their existing environment variables.  The security
84                 policy may return an error if the user does not have permis‐
85                 sion to preserve the environment.
86
87     --preserve-env=list
88                 Indicates to the security policy that the user wishes to add
89                 the comma-separated list of environment variables to those
90                 preserved from the user's environment.  The security policy
91                 may return an error if the user does not have permission to
92                 preserve the environment.
93
94     -e, --edit  Edit one or more files instead of running a command.  In lieu
95                 of a path name, the string "sudoedit" is used when consulting
96                 the security policy.  If the user is authorized by the pol‐
97                 icy, the following steps are taken:
98
99                 1.   Temporary copies are made of the files to be edited with
100                      the owner set to the invoking user.
101
102                 2.   The editor specified by the policy is run to edit the
103                      temporary files.  The sudoers policy uses the
104                      SUDO_EDITOR, VISUAL and EDITOR environment variables (in
105                      that order).  If none of SUDO_EDITOR, VISUAL or EDITOR
106                      are set, the first program listed in the editor
107                      sudoers(5) option is used.
108
109                 3.   If they have been modified, the temporary files are
110                      copied back to their original location and the temporary
111                      versions are removed.
112
113                 To help prevent the editing of unauthorized files, the fol‐
114                 lowing restrictions are enforced unless explicitly allowed by
115                 the security policy:
116
117                 ·  Symbolic links may not be edited (version 1.8.15 and
118                    higher).
119
120                 ·  Symbolic links along the path to be edited are not fol‐
121                    lowed when the parent directory is writable by the invok‐
122                    ing user unless that user is root (version 1.8.16 and
123                    higher).
124
125                 ·  Files located in a directory that is writable by the
126                    invoking user may not be edited unless that user is root
127                    (version 1.8.16 and higher).
128
129                 Users are never allowed to edit device special files.
130
131                 If the specified file does not exist, it will be created.
132                 Note that unlike most commands run by sudo, the editor is run
133                 with the invoking user's environment unmodified.  If, for
134                 some reason, sudo is unable to update a file with its edited
135                 version, the user will receive a warning and the edited copy
136                 will remain in a temporary file.
137
138     -g group, --group=group
139                 Run the command with the primary group set to group instead
140                 of the primary group specified by the target user's password
141                 database entry.  The group may be either a group name or a
142                 numeric group ID (GID) prefixed with the ‘#’ character (e.g.,
143                 #0 for GID 0).  When running a command as a GID, many shells
144                 require that the ‘#’ be escaped with a backslash (‘\’).  If
145                 no -u option is specified, the command will be run as the
146                 invoking user.  In either case, the primary group will be set
147                 to group.  The sudoers policy permits any of the target
148                 user's groups to be specified via the -g option as long as
149                 the -P option is not in use.
150
151     -H, --set-home
152                 Request that the security policy set the HOME environment
153                 variable to the home directory specified by the target user's
154                 password database entry.  Depending on the policy, this may
155                 be the default behavior.
156
157     -h, --help  Display a short help message to the standard output and exit.
158
159     -h host, --host=host
160                 Run the command on the specified host if the security policy
161                 plugin supports remote commands.  Note that the sudoers plug‐
162                 in does not currently support running remote commands.  This
163                 may also be used in conjunction with the -l option to list a
164                 user's privileges for the remote host.
165
166     -i, --login
167                 Run the shell specified by the target user's password data‐
168                 base entry as a login shell.  This means that login-specific
169                 resource files such as .profile, .bash_profile or .login will
170                 be read by the shell.  If a command is specified, it is
171                 passed to the shell for execution via the shell's -c option.
172                 If no command is specified, an interactive shell is executed.
173                 sudo attempts to change to that user's home directory before
174                 running the shell.  The command is run with an environment
175                 similar to the one a user would receive at log in.  Note that
176                 most shells behave differently when a command is specified as
177                 compared to an interactive session; consult the shell's man‐
178                 ual for details.  The Command environment section in the
179                 sudoers(5) manual documents how the -i option affects the
180                 environment in which a command is run when the sudoers policy
181                 is in use.
182
183     -K, --remove-timestamp
184                 Similar to the -k option, except that it removes the user's
185                 cached credentials entirely and may not be used in conjunc‐
186                 tion with a command or other option.  This option does not
187                 require a password.  Not all security policies support cre‐
188                 dential caching.
189
190     -k, --reset-timestamp
191                 When used without a command, invalidates the user's cached
192                 credentials.  In other words, the next time sudo is run a
193                 password will be required.  This option does not require a
194                 password and was added to allow a user to revoke sudo permis‐
195                 sions from a .logout file.
196
197                 When used in conjunction with a command or an option that may
198                 require a password, this option will cause sudo to ignore the
199                 user's cached credentials.  As a result, sudo will prompt for
200                 a password (if one is required by the security policy) and
201                 will not update the user's cached credentials.
202
203                 Not all security policies support credential caching.
204
205     -l, --list  If no command is specified, list the allowed (and forbidden)
206                 commands for the invoking user (or the user specified by the
207                 -U option) on the current host.  A longer list format is used
208                 if this option is specified multiple times and the security
209                 policy supports a verbose output format.
210
211                 If a command is specified and is permitted by the security
212                 policy, the fully-qualified path to the command is displayed
213                 along with any command line arguments.  If a command is spec‐
214                 ified but not allowed by the policy, sudo will exit with a
215                 status value of 1.
216
217     -n, --non-interactive
218                 Avoid prompting the user for input of any kind.  If a pass‐
219                 word is required for the command to run, sudo will display an
220                 error message and exit.
221
222     -P, --preserve-groups
223                 Preserve the invoking user's group vector unaltered.  By
224                 default, the sudoers policy will initialize the group vector
225                 to the list of groups the target user is a member of.  The
226                 real and effective group IDs, however, are still set to match
227                 the target user.
228
229     -p prompt, --prompt=prompt
230                 Use a custom password prompt with optional escape sequences.
231                 The following percent (‘%’) escape sequences are supported by
232                 the sudoers policy:
233
234                 %H  expanded to the host name including the domain name (on
235                     if the machine's host name is fully qualified or the fqdn
236                     option is set in sudoers(5))
237
238                 %h  expanded to the local host name without the domain name
239
240                 %p  expanded to the name of the user whose password is being
241                     requested (respects the rootpw, targetpw, and runaspw
242                     flags in sudoers(5))
243
244                 %U  expanded to the login name of the user the command will
245                     be run as (defaults to root unless the -u option is also
246                     specified)
247
248                 %u  expanded to the invoking user's login name
249
250                 %%  two consecutive ‘%’ characters are collapsed into a sin‐
251                     gle ‘%’ character
252
253                 The custom prompt will override the default prompt specified
254                 by either the security policy or the SUDO_PROMPT environment
255                 variable.  On systems that use PAM, the custom prompt will
256                 also override the prompt specified by a PAM module unless the
257                 passprompt_override flag is disabled in sudoers.
258
259     -r role, --role=role
260                 Run the command with an SELinux security context that
261                 includes the specified role.
262
263     -S, --stdin
264                 Write the prompt to the standard error and read the password
265                 from the standard input instead of using the terminal device.
266
267     -s, --shell
268                 Run the shell specified by the SHELL environment variable if
269                 it is set or the shell specified by the invoking user's pass‐
270                 word database entry.  If a command is specified, it is passed
271                 to the shell for execution via the shell's -c option.  If no
272                 command is specified, an interactive shell is executed.  Note
273                 that most shells behave differently when a command is speci‐
274                 fied as compared to an interactive session; consult the
275                 shell's manual for details.
276
277     -t type, --type=type
278                 Run the command with an SELinux security context that
279                 includes the specified type.  If no type is specified, the
280                 default type is derived from the role.
281
282     -U user, --other-user=user
283                 Used in conjunction with the -l option to list the privileges
284                 for user instead of for the invoking user.  The security pol‐
285                 icy may restrict listing other users' privileges.  The
286                 sudoers policy only allows root or a user with the ALL privi‐
287                 lege on the current host to use this option.
288
289     -T timeout, --command-timeout=timeout
290                 Used to set a timeout for the command.  If the timeout
291                 expires before the command has exited, the command will be
292                 terminated.  The security policy may restrict the ability to
293                 set command timeouts.  The sudoers policy requires that user-
294                 specified timeouts be explicitly enabled.
295
296     -u user, --user=user
297                 Run the command as a user other than the default target user
298                 (usually root).  The user may be either a user name or a
299                 numeric user ID (UID) prefixed with the ‘#’ character (e.g.,
300                 #0 for UID 0).  When running commands as a UID, many shells
301                 require that the ‘#’ be escaped with a backslash (‘\’).  Some
302                 security policies may restrict UIDs to those listed in the
303                 password database.  The sudoers policy allows UIDs that are
304                 not in the password database as long as the targetpw option
305                 is not set.  Other security policies may not support this.
306
307     -V, --version
308                 Print the sudo version string as well as the version string
309                 of the security policy plugin and any I/O plugins.  If the
310                 invoking user is already root the -V option will display the
311                 arguments passed to configure when sudo was built and plugins
312                 may display more verbose information such as default options.
313
314     -v, --validate
315                 Update the user's cached credentials, authenticating the user
316                 if necessary.  For the sudoers plugin, this extends the sudo
317                 timeout for another 5 minutes by default, but does not run a
318                 command.  Not all security policies support cached creden‐
319                 tials.
320
321     --          The -- option indicates that sudo should stop processing com‐
322                 mand line arguments.
323
324     Environment variables to be set for the command may also be passed on the
325     command line in the form of VAR=value, e.g.,
326     LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/pkg/lib.  Variables passed on the command line
327     are subject to restrictions imposed by the security policy plugin.  The
328     sudoers policy subjects variables passed on the command line to the same
329     restrictions as normal environment variables with one important excep‐
330     tion.  If the setenv option is set in sudoers, the command to be run has
331     the SETENV tag set or the command matched is ALL, the user may set vari‐
332     ables that would otherwise be forbidden.  See sudoers(5) for more infor‐
333     mation.
334

COMMAND EXECUTION

336     When sudo executes a command, the security policy specifies the execution
337     environment for the command.  Typically, the real and effective user and
338     group and IDs are set to match those of the target user, as specified in
339     the password database, and the group vector is initialized based on the
340     group database (unless the -P option was specified).
341
342     The following parameters may be specified by security policy:
343
344     ·  real and effective user ID
345
346     ·  real and effective group ID
347
348     ·  supplementary group IDs
349
350     ·  the environment list
351
352     ·  current working directory
353
354     ·  file creation mode mask (umask)
355
356     ·  SELinux role and type
357
358     ·  scheduling priority (aka nice value)
359
360   Process model
361     There are two distinct ways sudo can run a command.
362
363     If an I/O logging plugin is configured or if the security policy explic‐
364     itly requests it, a new pseudo-terminal (“pty”) is allocated and fork(2)
365     is used to create a second sudo process, referred to as the monitor.  The
366     monitor creates a new terminal session with itself as the leader and the
367     pty as its controlling terminal, calls fork(2), sets up the execution
368     environment as described above, and then uses the execve(2) system call
369     to run the command in the child process.  The monitor exists to relay job
370     control signals between the user's existing terminal and the pty the com‐
371     mand is being run in.  This makes it possible to suspend and resume the
372     command.  Without the monitor, the command would be in what POSIX terms
373     an “orphaned process group” and it would not receive any job control sig‐
374     nals from the kernel.  When the command exits or is terminated by a sig‐
375     nal, the monitor passes the command's exit status to the main sudo
376     process and exits.  After receiving the command's exit status, the main
377     sudo passes the command's exit status to the security policy's close
378     function and exits.
379
380     If no pty is used, sudo calls fork(2), sets up the execution environment
381     as described above, and uses the execve(2) system call to run the command
382     in the child process.  The main sudo process waits until the command has
383     completed, then passes the command's exit status to the security policy's
384     close function and exits.  As a special case, if the policy plugin does
385     not define a close function, sudo will execute the command directly
386     instead of calling fork(2) first.  The sudoers policy plugin will only
387     define a close function when I/O logging is enabled, a pty is required,
388     or the pam_session or pam_setcred options are enabled.  Note that
389     pam_session and pam_setcred are enabled by default on systems using PAM.
390
391   Signal handling
392     When the command is run as a child of the sudo process, sudo will relay
393     signals it receives to the command.  The SIGINT and SIGQUIT signals are
394     only relayed when the command is being run in a new pty or when the sig‐
395     nal was sent by a user process, not the kernel.  This prevents the com‐
396     mand from receiving SIGINT twice each time the user enters control-C.
397     Some signals, such as SIGSTOP and SIGKILL, cannot be caught and thus will
398     not be relayed to the command.  As a general rule, SIGTSTP should be used
399     instead of SIGSTOP when you wish to suspend a command being run by sudo.
400
401     As a special case, sudo will not relay signals that were sent by the com‐
402     mand it is running.  This prevents the command from accidentally killing
403     itself.  On some systems, the reboot(8) command sends SIGTERM to all non-
404     system processes other than itself before rebooting the system.  This
405     prevents sudo from relaying the SIGTERM signal it received back to
406     reboot(8), which might then exit before the system was actually rebooted,
407     leaving it in a half-dead state similar to single user mode.  Note, how‐
408     ever, that this check only applies to the command run by sudo and not any
409     other processes that the command may create.  As a result, running a
410     script that calls reboot(8) or shutdown(8) via sudo may cause the system
411     to end up in this undefined state unless the reboot(8) or shutdown(8) are
412     run using the exec() family of functions instead of system() (which
413     interposes a shell between the command and the calling process).
414
415     If no I/O logging plugins are loaded and the policy plugin has not
416     defined a close() function, set a command timeout or required that the
417     command be run in a new pty, sudo may execute the command directly
418     instead of running it as a child process.
419
420   Plugins
421     Plugins may be specified via Plugin directives in the sudo.conf(5) file.
422     They may be loaded as dynamic shared objects (on systems that support
423     them), or compiled directly into the sudo binary.  If no sudo.conf(5)
424     file is present, or it contains no Plugin lines, sudo will use the tradi‐
425     tional sudoers security policy and I/O logging.  See the sudo.conf(5)
426     manual for details of the /etc/sudo.conf file and the sudo_plugin(5) man‐
427     ual for more information about the sudo plugin architecture.
428

EXIT VALUE

430     Upon successful execution of a command, the exit status from sudo will be
431     the exit status of the program that was executed.  If the command termi‐
432     nated due to receipt of a signal, sudo will send itself the same signal
433     that terminated the command.
434
435     If the -l option was specified without a command, sudo will exit with a
436     value of 0 if the user is allowed to run sudo and they authenticated suc‐
437     cessfully (as required by the security policy).  If a command is speci‐
438     fied with the -l option, the exit value will only be 0 if the command is
439     permitted by the security policy, otherwise it will be 1.
440
441     If there is an authentication failure, a configuration/permission problem
442     or if the given command cannot be executed, sudo exits with a value of 1.
443     In the latter case, the error string is printed to the standard error.
444     If sudo cannot stat(2) one or more entries in the user's PATH, an error
445     is printed to the standard error.  (If the directory does not exist or if
446     it is not really a directory, the entry is ignored and no error is
447     printed.)  This should not happen under normal circumstances.  The most
448     common reason for stat(2) to return “permission denied” is if you are
449     running an automounter and one of the directories in your PATH is on a
450     machine that is currently unreachable.
451

SECURITY NOTES

453     sudo tries to be safe when executing external commands.
454
455     To prevent command spoofing, sudo checks "." and "" (both denoting cur‐
456     rent directory) last when searching for a command in the user's PATH (if
457     one or both are in the PATH).  Note, however, that the actual PATH envi‐
458     ronment variable is not modified and is passed unchanged to the program
459     that sudo executes.
460
461     Users should never be granted sudo privileges to execute files that are
462     writable by the user or that reside in a directory that is writable by
463     the user.  If the user can modify or replace the command there is no way
464     to limit what additional commands they can run.
465
466     Please note that sudo will normally only log the command it explicitly
467     runs.  If a user runs a command such as sudo su or sudo sh, subsequent
468     commands run from that shell are not subject to sudo's security policy.
469     The same is true for commands that offer shell escapes (including most
470     editors).  If I/O logging is enabled, subsequent commands will have their
471     input and/or output logged, but there will not be traditional logs for
472     those commands.  Because of this, care must be taken when giving users
473     access to commands via sudo to verify that the command does not inadver‐
474     tently give the user an effective root shell.  For more information,
475     please see the Preventing shell escapes section in sudoers(5).
476
477     To prevent the disclosure of potentially sensitive information, sudo dis‐
478     ables core dumps by default while it is executing (they are re-enabled
479     for the command that is run).  This historical practice dates from a time
480     when most operating systems allowed setuid processes to dump core by
481     default.  To aid in debugging sudo crashes, you may wish to re-enable
482     core dumps by setting “disable_coredump” to false in the sudo.conf(5)
483     file as follows:
484
485           Set disable_coredump false
486
487     See the sudo.conf(5) manual for more information.
488

ENVIRONMENT

490     sudo utilizes the following environment variables.  The security policy
491     has control over the actual content of the command's environment.
492
493     EDITOR           Default editor to use in -e (sudoedit) mode if neither
494                      SUDO_EDITOR nor VISUAL is set.
495
496     MAIL             Set to the mail spool of the target user when the -i
497                      option is specified or when env_reset is enabled in
498                      sudoers (unless MAIL is present in the env_keep list).
499
500     HOME             Set to the home directory of the target user when the -i
501                      or -H options are specified, when the -s option is spec‐
502                      ified and set_home is set in sudoers, when
503                      always_set_home is enabled in sudoers, or when env_reset
504                      is enabled in sudoers and HOME is not present in the
505                      env_keep list.
506
507     LOGNAME          Set to the login name of the target user when the -i
508                      option is specified, when the set_logname option is
509                      enabled in sudoers or when the env_reset option is
510                      enabled in sudoers (unless LOGNAME is present in the
511                      env_keep list).
512
513     PATH             May be overridden by the security policy.
514
515     SHELL            Used to determine shell to run with -s option.
516
517     SUDO_ASKPASS     Specifies the path to a helper program used to read the
518                      password if no terminal is available or if the -A option
519                      is specified.
520
521     SUDO_COMMAND     Set to the command run by sudo.
522
523     SUDO_EDITOR      Default editor to use in -e (sudoedit) mode.
524
525     SUDO_GID         Set to the group ID of the user who invoked sudo.
526
527     SUDO_PROMPT      Used as the default password prompt unless the -p option
528                      was specified.
529
530     SUDO_PS1         If set, PS1 will be set to its value for the program
531                      being run.
532
533     SUDO_UID         Set to the user ID of the user who invoked sudo.
534
535     SUDO_USER        Set to the login name of the user who invoked sudo.
536
537     USER             Set to the same value as LOGNAME, described above.
538
539     VISUAL           Default editor to use in -e (sudoedit) mode if
540                      SUDO_EDITOR is not set.
541

FILES

543     /etc/sudo.conf            sudo front end configuration
544

EXAMPLES

546     Note: the following examples assume a properly configured security pol‐
547     icy.
548
549     To get a file listing of an unreadable directory:
550
551           $ sudo ls /usr/local/protected
552
553     To list the home directory of user yaz on a machine where the file system
554     holding ~yaz is not exported as root:
555
556           $ sudo -u yaz ls ~yaz
557
558     To edit the index.html file as user www:
559
560           $ sudoedit -u www ~www/htdocs/index.html
561
562     To view system logs only accessible to root and users in the adm group:
563
564           $ sudo -g adm more /var/log/syslog
565
566     To run an editor as jim with a different primary group:
567
568           $ sudoedit -u jim -g audio ~jim/sound.txt
569
570     To shut down a machine:
571
572           $ sudo shutdown -r +15 "quick reboot"
573
574     To make a usage listing of the directories in the /home partition.  Note
575     that this runs the commands in a sub-shell to make the cd and file redi‐
576     rection work.
577
578           $ sudo sh -c "cd /home ; du -s * | sort -rn > USAGE"
579

DIAGNOSTICS

581     Error messages produced by sudo include:
582
583     editing files in a writable directory is not permitted
584           By default, sudoedit does not permit editing a file when any of the
585           parent directories are writable by the invoking user.  This avoids
586           a race condition that could allow the user to overwrite an arbi‐
587           trary file.  See the sudoedit_checkdir option in sudoers(5) for
588           more information.
589
590     editing symbolic links is not permitted
591           By default, sudoedit does not follow symbolic links when opening
592           files.  See the sudoedit_follow option in sudoers(5) for more
593           information.
594
595     effective uid is not 0, is sudo installed setuid root?
596           sudo was not run with root privileges.  The sudo binary must be
597           owned by the root user and have the Set-user-ID bit set.  Also, it
598           must not be located on a file system mounted with the ‘nosuid’
599           option or on an NFS file system that maps uid 0 to an unprivileged
600           uid.
601
602     effective uid is not 0, is sudo on a file system with the 'nosuid' option
603           set or an NFS file system without root privileges?
604           sudo was not run with root privileges.  The sudo binary has the
605           proper owner and permissions but it still did not run with root
606           privileges.  The most common reason for this is that the file sys‐
607           tem the sudo binary is located on is mounted with the ‘nosuid’
608           option or it is an NFS file system that maps uid 0 to an unprivi‐
609           leged uid.
610
611     fatal error, unable to load plugins
612           An error occurred while loading or initializing the plugins speci‐
613           fied in sudo.conf(5).
614
615     invalid environment variable name
616           One or more environment variable names specified via the -E option
617           contained an equal sign (‘=’).  The arguments to the -E option
618           should be environment variable names without an associated value.
619
620     no password was provided
621           When sudo tried to read the password, it did not receive any char‐
622           acters.  This may happen if no terminal is available (or the -S
623           option is specified) and the standard input has been redirected
624           from /dev/null.
625
626     no tty present and no askpass program specified
627           sudo needs to read the password but there is no mechanism available
628           to do so.  A terminal is not present to read the password from,
629           sudo has not been configured to read from the standard input, and
630           no askpass program has been specified either via the -A option or
631           the SUDO_ASKPASS environment variable.
632
633     no writable temporary directory found
634           sudoedit was unable to find a usable temporary directory in which
635           to store its intermediate files.
636
637     sudo must be owned by uid 0 and have the setuid bit set
638           sudo was not run with root privileges.  The sudo binary does not
639           have the correct owner or permissions.  It must be owned by the
640           root user and have the Set-user-ID bit set.
641
642     sudoedit is not supported on this platform
643           It is only possible to run sudoedit on systems that support setting
644           the effective user-ID.
645
646     timed out reading password
647           The user did not enter a password before the password timeout (5
648           minutes by default) expired.
649
650     you do not exist in the passwd database
651           Your user ID does not appear in the system passwd database.
652
653     you may not specify environment variables in edit mode
654           It is only possible to specify environment variables when running a
655           command.  When editing a file, the editor is run with the user's
656           environment unmodified.
657

SEE ALSO

659     su(1), stat(2), login_cap(3), passwd(5), sudo.conf(5), sudo_plugin(5),
660     sudoers(5), sudoreplay(8), visudo(8)
661

HISTORY

663     See the HISTORY file in the sudo distribution (https://www.sudo.ws/his
664     tory.html) for a brief history of sudo.
665

AUTHORS

667     Many people have worked on sudo over the years; this version consists of
668     code written primarily by:
669
670           Todd C. Miller
671
672     See the CONTRIBUTORS file in the sudo distribution
673     (https://www.sudo.ws/contributors.html) for an exhaustive list of people
674     who have contributed to sudo.
675

CAVEATS

677     There is no easy way to prevent a user from gaining a root shell if that
678     user is allowed to run arbitrary commands via sudo.  Also, many programs
679     (such as editors) allow the user to run commands via shell escapes, thus
680     avoiding sudo's checks.  However, on most systems it is possible to pre‐
681     vent shell escapes with the sudoers(5) plugin's noexec functionality.
682
683     It is not meaningful to run the cd command directly via sudo, e.g.,
684
685           $ sudo cd /usr/local/protected
686
687     since when the command exits the parent process (your shell) will still
688     be the same.  Please see the EXAMPLES section for more information.
689
690     Running shell scripts via sudo can expose the same kernel bugs that make
691     setuid shell scripts unsafe on some operating systems (if your OS has a
692     /dev/fd/ directory, setuid shell scripts are generally safe).
693

BUGS

695     If you feel you have found a bug in sudo, please submit a bug report at
696     https://bugzilla.sudo.ws/
697

SUPPORT

699     Limited free support is available via the sudo-users mailing list, see
700     https://www.sudo.ws/mailman/listinfo/sudo-users to subscribe or search
701     the archives.
702

DISCLAIMER

704     sudo is provided “AS IS” and any express or implied warranties, includ‐
705     ing, but not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability and
706     fitness for a particular purpose are disclaimed.  See the LICENSE file
707     distributed with sudo or https://www.sudo.ws/license.html for complete
708     details.
709
710Sudo 1.8.27                    November 25, 2018                   Sudo 1.8.27
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