My user account doesnt have sudo despite being in sudoers. I cant run new commands i have to execute the binary. Grub takes very long to load with “welcome to grub” message. I just wanted a stable distro as arch broke and currupted my external ssd
My user account doesnt have sudo despite being in sudoers. I cant run new commands i have to execute the binary. Grub takes very long to load with “welcome to grub” message. I just wanted a stable distro as arch broke and currupted my external ssd
You also have
sudo -s, which is similar tosu.Some distros set up
sudoby default, and some don’t. I started out on Red Hat, back in the 1990s, and I don’t believe that they set up sudo by default; the norm there, at least at the time, was tosu. Ubuntu, as I recall, installssudoand I believe configures it to grant sudo access to the user account who did the installation. There, the convention is to kindasudo. I can’t recall whether the default is passwordless, though.I don’t think that using either is a horrendously bad practice. I tend to set up sudo in password-requiring mode and use
sudothese days, but I wouldn’t blink an eye at usingsueither.I think that the most-significant security concern with
suis that you can leave a root shell lying around if you walk away from your computer, and whilesudomay reduce the frequency with which that happens – if one is prone to walking away from their computer and leaving it unlocked in the first place – you can do that withsudo -sas well, which I certainly use, so…shrugs Plus, if you havesudoset up with passwordless root access, any shell is functionally a root shell anyway. And, frankly, if someone has physical access to a system, most people don’t bother to lock down their system against settinginit=/bin/shon the kernel command line in GRUB, passwording their BIOS and restricting it from booting from alternate boot media, etc, so…