01793c9cfc
- Update to 1.9.15p2: * Fixed a bug on BSD systems where sudo would not restore the terminal settings on exit if the terminal had parity enabled. GitHub issue #326. - Update to 1.9.15p1: * Fixed a bug introduced in sudo 1.9.15 that prevented LDAP-based sudoers from being able to read the ldap.conf file. GitHub issue #325. - Update to 1.9.15: * Fixed an undefined symbol problem on older versions of macOS when "intercept" or "log_subcmds" are enabled in sudoers. GitHub issue #276. * Fixed "make check" failure related to getpwent(3) wrapping on NetBSD. * Fixed the warning message for "sudo -l command" when the command is not permitted. There was a missing space between "list" and the actual command due to changes in sudo 1.9.14. * Fixed a bug where output could go to the wrong terminal if "use_pty" is enabled (the default) and the standard input, output or error is redirected to a different terminal. Bug #1056. * The visudo utility will no longer create an empty file when the specified sudoers file does not exist and the user exits the editor without making any changes. GitHub issue #294. * The AIX and Solaris sudo packages on www.sudo.ws now support "log_subcmds" and "intercept" with both 32-bit and 64-bit binaries. Previously, they only worked when running binaries with the same word size as the sudo binary. GitHub issue #289. * The sudoers source is now logged in the JSON event log. This makes it possible to tell which rule resulted in a match. * Running "sudo -ll command" now produces verbose output that OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/request/show/1128140 OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Base:System/sudo?expand=0&rev=247 |
||
---|---|---|
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
50-wheel-auth-self.conf | ||
51-wheel.rules | ||
fate_313276_test.sh | ||
README_313276.test | ||
README.SUSE | ||
sudo-1.9.15p2.tar.gz | ||
sudo-1.9.15p2.tar.gz.sig | ||
sudo-i.pamd | ||
sudo-sudoers.patch | ||
sudo.changes | ||
sudo.keyring | ||
sudo.pamd | ||
sudo.spec | ||
system-group-sudo.conf |
In the default (ie unconfigured) configuration sudo asks for root password. This allows to use an ordinary user account for administration of a freshly installed system. When configuring sudo, please make sure to delete the two following lines: Defaults targetpw # ask for the password of the target user i.e. root %users ALL=(ALL) ALL # WARNING! Only use this together with 'Defaults targetpw'!