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Date:      Thu, 3 Mar 2005 22:47:09 +0000
From:      Pietro Cerutti <pietro.cerutti@gmail.com>
To:        Paul Schmehl <pauls@utdallas.edu>
Cc:        FreeBSD <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: sudo & su
Message-ID:  <e572718c05030314475384d7e3@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <2F1BC4E1DAFE0EE0733135BA@utd49554.utdallas.edu>
References:  <e572718c05030313394a3bb5f0@mail.gmail.com> <2F1BC4E1DAFE0EE0733135BA@utd49554.utdallas.edu>

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On Thu, 03 Mar 2005 15:56:26 -0600, Paul Schmehl <pauls@utdallas.edu> wrote:

> Sure.  Use visudo to edit /etc/sudoers and set:
> root    ALL = (ALL) ALL
> wheel   ALL = (ALL) ALL
> 
> If NOPASSWD is in there, take it out.

There isn't any NOPASSWD, but if I give the password the first time,
sudo doesn't ask for it anymore in the next 5 min or so...

> Sudo doesn't ask for *root*'s password.  It asks for *your* password.  If
> you knew root's password, you wouldn't need to use sudo.  You could use su.

I think I really misunderstood the purpose of sudo. I thought that it
was used to automatically login as root, give a command, and log back
out to user who invoked the command.
So what's the purpose of asking for the password of the actually logged in user?

Thank you


-- 
Pietro "Piter" Cerutti
<pietro.cerutti@gmail.com>
<piter@beansidhe.ch>

Beansidhe - SwiSS Death / Thrash Metal
<www.beansidhe.ch>

Windows: "Where do you want to go today?"
Linux: "Where do you want to go tomorrow?"
FreeBSD: "Are you guys coming or what?"



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