Annotation of embedaddon/sudo/doc/sudoers.mdoc.in, revision 1.1.1.1

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                     22: .Dd July 16, 2012
                     23: .Dt SUDOERS @mansectform@
                     24: .Os Sudo @PACKAGE_VERSION@
                     25: .Sh NAME
                     26: .Nm sudoers
                     27: .Nd default sudo security policy module
                     28: .Sh DESCRIPTION
                     29: The
                     30: .Em sudoers
                     31: policy module determines a user's
                     32: .Nm sudo
                     33: privileges.
                     34: It is the default
                     35: .Nm sudo
                     36: policy plugin.
                     37: The policy is driven by
                     38: the
                     39: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudoers
                     40: file or, optionally in LDAP.
                     41: The policy format is described in detail in the
                     42: .Sx SUDOERS FILE FORMAT
                     43: section.
                     44: For information on storing
                     45: .Em sudoers
                     46: policy information
                     47: in LDAP, please see
                     48: .Xr sudoers.ldap @mansectform@ .
                     49: .Ss Authentication and logging
                     50: The
                     51: .Em sudoers
                     52: security policy requires that most users authenticate
                     53: themselves before they can use
                     54: .Nm sudo .
                     55: A password is not required
                     56: if the invoking user is root, if the target user is the same as the
                     57: invoking user, or if the policy has disabled authentication for the
                     58: user or command.
                     59: Unlike
                     60: .Xr su 1 ,
                     61: when
                     62: .Em sudoers
                     63: requires
                     64: authentication, it validates the invoking user's credentials, not
                     65: the target user's (or root's) credentials.
                     66: This can be changed via
                     67: the
                     68: .Em rootpw ,
                     69: .Em targetpw
                     70: and
                     71: .Em runaspw
                     72: flags, described later.
                     73: .Pp
                     74: If a user who is not listed in the policy tries to run a command
                     75: via
                     76: .Nm sudo ,
                     77: mail is sent to the proper authorities.
                     78: The address
                     79: used for such mail is configurable via the
                     80: .Em mailto
                     81: Defaults entry
                     82: (described later) and defaults to
                     83: .Li @mailto@ .
                     84: .Pp
                     85: Note that mail will not be sent if an unauthorized user tries to
                     86: run
                     87: .Nm sudo
                     88: with the
                     89: .Fl l
                     90: or
                     91: .Fl v
                     92: option.
                     93: This allows users to
                     94: determine for themselves whether or not they are allowed to use
                     95: .Nm sudo .
                     96: .Pp
                     97: If
                     98: .Nm sudo
                     99: is run by root and the
                    100: .Ev SUDO_USER
                    101: environment variable
                    102: is set, the
                    103: .Em sudoers
                    104: policy will use this value to determine who
                    105: the actual user is.
                    106: This can be used by a user to log commands
                    107: through sudo even when a root shell has been invoked.
                    108: It also
                    109: allows the
                    110: .Fl e
                    111: option to remain useful even when invoked via a
                    112: sudo-run script or program.
                    113: Note, however, that the
                    114: .Em sudoers
                    115: lookup is still done for root, not the user specified by
                    116: .Ev SUDO_USER .
                    117: .Pp
                    118: .Em sudoers
                    119: uses time stamp files for credential caching.
                    120: Once a
                    121: user has been authenticated, the time stamp is updated and the user
                    122: may then use sudo without a password for a short period of time
                    123: .Po
                    124: .Li @timeout@
                    125: minutes unless overridden by the
                    126: .Em timeout
                    127: option
                    128: .Pc .
                    129: By default,
                    130: .Em sudoers
                    131: uses a tty-based time stamp which means that
                    132: there is a separate time stamp for each of a user's login sessions.
                    133: The
                    134: .Em tty_tickets
                    135: option can be disabled to force the use of a
                    136: single time stamp for all of a user's sessions.
                    137: .Pp
                    138: .Em sudoers
                    139: can log both successful and unsuccessful attempts (as well
                    140: as errors) to
                    141: .Xr syslog 3 ,
                    142: a log file, or both.
                    143: By default,
                    144: .Em sudoers
                    145: will log via
                    146: .Xr syslog 3
                    147: but this is changeable via the
                    148: .Em syslog
                    149: and
                    150: .Em logfile
                    151: Defaults settings.
                    152: .Pp
                    153: .Em sudoers
                    154: also supports logging a command's input and output
                    155: streams.
                    156: I/O logging is not on by default but can be enabled using
                    157: the
                    158: .Em log_input
                    159: and
                    160: .Em log_output
                    161: Defaults flags as well as the
                    162: .Li LOG_INPUT
                    163: and
                    164: .Li LOG_OUTPUT
                    165: command tags.
                    166: .Ss Command environment
                    167: Since environment variables can influence program behavior,
                    168: .Em sudoers
                    169: provides a means to restrict which variables from the user's
                    170: environment are inherited by the command to be run.
                    171: There are two
                    172: distinct ways
                    173: .Em sudoers
                    174: can deal with environment variables.
                    175: .Pp
                    176: By default, the
                    177: .Em env_reset
                    178: option is enabled.
                    179: This causes commands
                    180: to be executed with a new, minimal environment.
                    181: On AIX (and Linux
                    182: systems without PAM), the environment is initialized with the
                    183: contents of the
                    184: .Pa /etc/environment
                    185: file.
                    186: On BSD systems, if the
                    187: .Em use_loginclass
                    188: option is enabled, the environment is initialized
                    189: based on the
                    190: .Em path
                    191: and
                    192: .Em setenv
                    193: settings in
                    194: .Pa /etc/login.conf .
                    195: The new environment contains the
                    196: .Ev TERM ,
                    197: .Ev PATH ,
                    198: .Ev HOME ,
                    199: .Ev MAIL ,
                    200: .Ev SHELL ,
                    201: .Ev LOGNAME ,
                    202: .Ev USER ,
                    203: .Ev USERNAME
                    204: and
                    205: .Ev SUDO_*
                    206: variables
                    207: in addition to variables from the invoking process permitted by the
                    208: .Em env_check
                    209: and
                    210: .Em env_keep
                    211: options.
                    212: This is effectively a whitelist
                    213: for environment variables.
                    214: .Pp
                    215: If, however, the
                    216: .Em env_reset
                    217: option is disabled, any variables not
                    218: explicitly denied by the
                    219: .Em env_check
                    220: and
                    221: .Em env_delete
                    222: options are
                    223: inherited from the invoking process.
                    224: In this case,
                    225: .Em env_check
                    226: and
                    227: .Em env_delete
                    228: behave like a blacklist.
                    229: Since it is not possible
                    230: to blacklist all potentially dangerous environment variables, use
                    231: of the default
                    232: .Em env_reset
                    233: behavior is encouraged.
                    234: .Pp
                    235: In all cases, environment variables with a value beginning with
                    236: .Li ()
                    237: are removed as they could be interpreted as
                    238: .Sy bash
                    239: functions.
                    240: The list of environment variables that
                    241: .Nm sudo
                    242: allows or denies is
                    243: contained in the output of
                    244: .Dq Li sudo -V
                    245: when run as root.
                    246: .Pp
                    247: Note that the dynamic linker on most operating systems will remove
                    248: variables that can control dynamic linking from the environment of
                    249: setuid executables, including
                    250: .Nm sudo .
                    251: Depending on the operating
                    252: system this may include
                    253: .Ev _RLD* ,
                    254: .Ev DYLD_* ,
                    255: .Ev LD_* ,
                    256: .Ev LDR_* ,
                    257: .Ev LIBPATH ,
                    258: .Ev SHLIB_PATH ,
                    259: and others.
                    260: These type of variables are
                    261: removed from the environment before
                    262: .Nm sudo
                    263: even begins execution
                    264: and, as such, it is not possible for
                    265: .Nm sudo
                    266: to preserve them.
                    267: .Pp
                    268: As a special case, if
                    269: .Nm sudo Ns No 's
                    270: .Fl i
                    271: option (initial login) is
                    272: specified,
                    273: .Em sudoers
                    274: will initialize the environment regardless
                    275: of the value of
                    276: .Em env_reset .
                    277: The
                    278: .Ev DISPLAY ,
                    279: .Ev PATH
                    280: and
                    281: .Ev TERM
                    282: variables remain unchanged;
                    283: .Ev HOME ,
                    284: .Ev MAIL ,
                    285: .Ev SHELL ,
                    286: .Ev USER ,
                    287: and
                    288: .Ev LOGNAME
                    289: are set based on the target user.
                    290: On AIX (and Linux
                    291: systems without PAM), the contents of
                    292: .Pa /etc/environment
                    293: are also
                    294: included.
                    295: On BSD systems, if the
                    296: .Em use_loginclass
                    297: option is
                    298: enabled, the
                    299: .Em path
                    300: and
                    301: .Em setenv
                    302: variables in
                    303: .Pa /etc/login.conf
                    304: are also applied.
                    305: All other environment variables are removed.
                    306: .Pp
                    307: Finally, if the
                    308: .Em env_file
                    309: option is defined, any variables present
                    310: in that file will be set to their specified values as long as they
                    311: would not conflict with an existing environment variable.
                    312: .Sh SUDOERS FILE FORMAT
                    313: The
                    314: .Em sudoers
                    315: file is composed of two types of entries: aliases
                    316: (basically variables) and user specifications (which specify who
                    317: may run what).
                    318: .Pp
                    319: When multiple entries match for a user, they are applied in order.
                    320: Where there are multiple matches, the last match is used (which is
                    321: not necessarily the most specific match).
                    322: .Pp
                    323: The
                    324: .Em sudoers
                    325: grammar will be described below in Extended Backus-Naur
                    326: Form (EBNF).
                    327: Don't despair if you are unfamiliar with EBNF; it is fairly simple,
                    328: and the definitions below are annotated.
                    329: .Ss Quick guide to EBNF
                    330: EBNF is a concise and exact way of describing the grammar of a language.
                    331: Each EBNF definition is made up of
                    332: .Em production rules .
                    333: E.g.,
                    334: .Pp
                    335: .Li  symbol ::= definition | alternate1 | alternate2 ...
                    336: .Pp
                    337: Each
                    338: .Em production rule
                    339: references others and thus makes up a
                    340: grammar for the language.
                    341: EBNF also contains the following
                    342: operators, which many readers will recognize from regular
                    343: expressions.
                    344: Do not, however, confuse them with
                    345: .Dq wildcard
                    346: characters, which have different meanings.
                    347: .Bl -tag -width 4n
                    348: .It Li \&?
                    349: Means that the preceding symbol (or group of symbols) is optional.
                    350: That is, it may appear once or not at all.
                    351: .It Li *
                    352: Means that the preceding symbol (or group of symbols) may appear
                    353: zero or more times.
                    354: .It Li +
                    355: Means that the preceding symbol (or group of symbols) may appear
                    356: one or more times.
                    357: .El
                    358: .Pp
                    359: Parentheses may be used to group symbols together.
                    360: For clarity,
                    361: we will use single quotes
                    362: .Pq ''
                    363: to designate what is a verbatim character string (as opposed to a symbol name).
                    364: .Ss Aliases
                    365: There are four kinds of aliases:
                    366: .Li User_Alias ,
                    367: .Li Runas_Alias ,
                    368: .Li Host_Alias
                    369: and
                    370: .Li Cmnd_Alias .
                    371: .Bd -literal
                    372: Alias ::= 'User_Alias'  User_Alias (':' User_Alias)* |
                    373:           'Runas_Alias' Runas_Alias (':' Runas_Alias)* |
                    374:           'Host_Alias'  Host_Alias (':' Host_Alias)* |
                    375:           'Cmnd_Alias'  Cmnd_Alias (':' Cmnd_Alias)*
                    376: 
                    377: User_Alias ::= NAME '=' User_List
                    378: 
                    379: Runas_Alias ::= NAME '=' Runas_List
                    380: 
                    381: Host_Alias ::= NAME '=' Host_List
                    382: 
                    383: Cmnd_Alias ::= NAME '=' Cmnd_List
                    384: 
                    385: NAME ::= [A-Z]([A-Z][0-9]_)*
                    386: .Ed
                    387: .Pp
                    388: Each
                    389: .Em alias
                    390: definition is of the form
                    391: .Bd -literal
                    392: Alias_Type NAME = item1, item2, ...
                    393: .Ed
                    394: .Pp
                    395: where
                    396: .Em Alias_Type
                    397: is one of
                    398: .Li User_Alias ,
                    399: .Li Runas_Alias ,
                    400: .Li Host_Alias ,
                    401: or
                    402: .Li Cmnd_Alias .
                    403: A
                    404: .Li NAME
                    405: is a string of uppercase letters, numbers,
                    406: and underscore characters
                    407: .Pq Ql _ .
                    408: A
                    409: .Li NAME
                    410: .Sy must
                    411: start with an
                    412: uppercase letter.
                    413: It is possible to put several alias definitions
                    414: of the same type on a single line, joined by a colon
                    415: .Pq Ql :\& .
                    416: E.g.,
                    417: .Bd -literal
                    418: Alias_Type NAME = item1, item2, item3 : NAME = item4, item5
                    419: .Ed
                    420: .Pp
                    421: The definitions of what constitutes a valid
                    422: .Em alias
                    423: member follow.
                    424: .Bd -literal
                    425: User_List ::= User |
                    426:               User ',' User_List
                    427: 
                    428: User ::= '!'* user name |
                    429:          '!'* #uid |
                    430:          '!'* %group |
                    431:          '!'* %#gid |
                    432:          '!'* +netgroup |
                    433:          '!'* %:nonunix_group |
                    434:          '!'* %:#nonunix_gid |
                    435:          '!'* User_Alias
                    436: .Ed
                    437: .Pp
                    438: A
                    439: .Li User_List
                    440: is made up of one or more user names, user ids
                    441: (prefixed with
                    442: .Ql # ) ,
                    443: system group names and ids (prefixed with
                    444: .Ql %
                    445: and
                    446: .Ql %#
                    447: respectively), netgroups (prefixed with
                    448: .Ql + ) ,
                    449: non-Unix group names and IDs (prefixed with
                    450: .Ql %:
                    451: and
                    452: .Ql %:#
                    453: respectively) and
                    454: .Li User_Alias Ns No es.
                    455: Each list item may be prefixed with zero or more
                    456: .Ql \&!
                    457: operators.
                    458: An odd number of
                    459: .Ql \&!
                    460: operators negate the value of
                    461: the item; an even number just cancel each other out.
                    462: .Pp
                    463: A
                    464: .Li user name ,
                    465: .Li uid ,
                    466: .Li group ,
                    467: .Li gid ,
                    468: .Li netgroup ,
                    469: .Li nonunix_group
                    470: or
                    471: .Li nonunix_gid
                    472: may be enclosed in double quotes to avoid the
                    473: need for escaping special characters.
                    474: Alternately, special characters
                    475: may be specified in escaped hex mode, e.g.\& \ex20 for space.
                    476: When
                    477: using double quotes, any prefix characters must be included inside
                    478: the quotes.
                    479: .Pp
                    480: The actual
                    481: .Li nonunix_group
                    482: and
                    483: .Li nonunix_gid
                    484: syntax depends on
                    485: the underlying group provider plugin (see the
                    486: .Em group_plugin
                    487: description below).
                    488: For instance, the QAS AD plugin supports the following formats:
                    489: .Bl -bullet -width 4n
                    490: .It
                    491: Group in the same domain: "%:Group Name"
                    492: .It
                    493: Group in any domain: "%:Group Name@FULLY.QUALIFIED.DOMAIN"
                    494: .It
                    495: Group SID: "%:S-1-2-34-5678901234-5678901234-5678901234-567"
                    496: .El
                    497: .Pp
                    498: Note that quotes around group names are optional.
                    499: Unquoted strings must use a backslash
                    500: .Pq Ql \e
                    501: to escape spaces and special characters.
                    502: See
                    503: .Sx Other special characters and reserved words
                    504: for a list of
                    505: characters that need to be escaped.
                    506: .Bd -literal
                    507: Runas_List ::= Runas_Member |
                    508:                Runas_Member ',' Runas_List
                    509: 
                    510: Runas_Member ::= '!'* user name |
                    511:                  '!'* #uid |
                    512:                  '!'* %group |
                    513:                  '!'* %#gid |
                    514:                  '!'* %:nonunix_group |
                    515:                  '!'* %:#nonunix_gid |
                    516:                  '!'* +netgroup |
                    517:                  '!'* Runas_Alias
                    518: .Ed
                    519: .Pp
                    520: A
                    521: .Li Runas_List
                    522: is similar to a
                    523: .Li User_List
                    524: except that instead
                    525: of
                    526: .Li User_Alias Ns No es
                    527: it can contain
                    528: .Li Runas_Alias Ns No es .
                    529: Note that
                    530: user names and groups are matched as strings.
                    531: In other words, two
                    532: users (groups) with the same uid (gid) are considered to be distinct.
                    533: If you wish to match all user names with the same uid (e.g.\&
                    534: root and toor), you can use a uid instead (#0 in the example given).
                    535: .Bd -literal
                    536: Host_List ::= Host |
                    537:               Host ',' Host_List
                    538: 
                    539: Host ::= '!'* host name |
                    540:          '!'* ip_addr |
                    541:          '!'* network(/netmask)? |
                    542:          '!'* +netgroup |
                    543:          '!'* Host_Alias
                    544: .Ed
                    545: .Pp
                    546: A
                    547: .Li Host_List
                    548: is made up of one or more host names, IP addresses,
                    549: network numbers, netgroups (prefixed with
                    550: .Ql + )
                    551: and other aliases.
                    552: Again, the value of an item may be negated with the
                    553: .Ql \&!
                    554: operator.
                    555: If you do not specify a netmask along with the network number,
                    556: .Nm sudo
                    557: will query each of the local host's network interfaces and,
                    558: if the network number corresponds to one of the hosts's network
                    559: interfaces, the corresponding netmask will be used.
                    560: The netmask
                    561: may be specified either in standard IP address notation
                    562: (e.g.\& 255.255.255.0 or ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff::),
                    563: or CIDR notation (number of bits, e.g.\& 24 or 64).
                    564: A host name may include shell-style wildcards (see the
                    565: .Sx Wildcards
                    566: section below),
                    567: but unless the
                    568: .Li host name
                    569: command on your machine returns the fully
                    570: qualified host name, you'll need to use the
                    571: .Em fqdn
                    572: option for wildcards to be useful.
                    573: Note that
                    574: .Nm sudo
                    575: only inspects actual network interfaces; this means that IP address
                    576: 127.0.0.1 (localhost) will never match.
                    577: Also, the host name
                    578: .Dq localhost
                    579: will only match if that is the actual host name, which is usually
                    580: only the case for non-networked systems.
                    581: .Bd -literal
                    582: Cmnd_List ::= Cmnd |
                    583:               Cmnd ',' Cmnd_List
                    584: 
                    585: command name ::= file name |
                    586:                  file name args |
                    587:                  file name '""'
                    588: 
                    589: Cmnd ::= '!'* command name |
                    590:          '!'* directory |
                    591:          '!'* "sudoedit" |
                    592:          '!'* Cmnd_Alias
                    593: .Ed
                    594: .Pp
                    595: A
                    596: .Li Cmnd_List
                    597: is a list of one or more command names, directories, and other aliases.
                    598: A command name is a fully qualified file name which may include
                    599: shell-style wildcards (see the
                    600: .Sx Wildcards
                    601: section below).
                    602: A simple file name allows the user to run the command with any
                    603: arguments he/she wishes.
                    604: However, you may also specify command line arguments (including
                    605: wildcards).
                    606: Alternately, you can specify
                    607: .Li \&""
                    608: to indicate that the command
                    609: may only be run
                    610: .Sy without
                    611: command line arguments.
                    612: A directory is a
                    613: fully qualified path name ending in a
                    614: .Ql / .
                    615: When you specify a directory in a
                    616: .Li Cmnd_List ,
                    617: the user will be able to run any file within that directory
                    618: (but not in any sub-directories therein).
                    619: .Pp
                    620: If a
                    621: .Li Cmnd
                    622: has associated command line arguments, then the arguments
                    623: in the
                    624: .Li Cmnd
                    625: must match exactly those given by the user on the command line
                    626: (or match the wildcards if there are any).
                    627: Note that the following characters must be escaped with a
                    628: .Ql \e
                    629: if they are used in command arguments:
                    630: .Ql ,\& ,
                    631: .Ql :\& ,
                    632: .Ql =\& ,
                    633: .Ql \e .
                    634: The special command
                    635: .Dq Li sudoedit
                    636: is used to permit a user to run
                    637: .Nm sudo
                    638: with the
                    639: .Fl e
                    640: option (or as
                    641: .Nm sudoedit ) .
                    642: It may take command line arguments just as a normal command does.
                    643: .Ss Defaults
                    644: Certain configuration options may be changed from their default
                    645: values at run-time via one or more
                    646: .Li Default_Entry
                    647: lines.
                    648: These may affect all users on any host, all users on a specific host, a
                    649: specific user, a specific command, or commands being run as a specific user.
                    650: Note that per-command entries may not include command line arguments.
                    651: If you need to specify arguments, define a
                    652: .Li Cmnd_Alias
                    653: and reference
                    654: that instead.
                    655: .Bd -literal
                    656: Default_Type ::= 'Defaults' |
                    657:                  'Defaults' '@' Host_List |
                    658:                  'Defaults' ':' User_List |
                    659:                  'Defaults' '!' Cmnd_List |
                    660:                  'Defaults' '>' Runas_List
                    661: 
                    662: Default_Entry ::= Default_Type Parameter_List
                    663: 
                    664: Parameter_List ::= Parameter |
                    665:                    Parameter ',' Parameter_List
                    666: 
                    667: Parameter ::= Parameter '=' Value |
                    668:               Parameter '+=' Value |
                    669:               Parameter '-=' Value |
                    670:               '!'* Parameter
                    671: .Ed
                    672: .Pp
                    673: Parameters may be
                    674: .Sy flags ,
                    675: .Sy integer
                    676: values,
                    677: .Sy strings ,
                    678: or
                    679: .Sy lists .
                    680: Flags are implicitly boolean and can be turned off via the
                    681: .Ql \&!
                    682: operator.
                    683: Some integer, string and list parameters may also be
                    684: used in a boolean context to disable them.
                    685: Values may be enclosed
                    686: in double quotes
                    687: .Pq \&""
                    688: when they contain multiple words.
                    689: Special characters may be escaped with a backslash
                    690: .Pq Ql \e .
                    691: .Pp
                    692: Lists have two additional assignment operators,
                    693: .Li +=
                    694: and
                    695: .Li -= .
                    696: These operators are used to add to and delete from a list respectively.
                    697: It is not an error to use the
                    698: .Li -=
                    699: operator to remove an element
                    700: that does not exist in a list.
                    701: .Pp
                    702: Defaults entries are parsed in the following order: generic, host
                    703: and user Defaults first, then runas Defaults and finally command
                    704: defaults.
                    705: .Pp
                    706: See
                    707: .Sx SUDOERS OPTIONS
                    708: for a list of supported Defaults parameters.
                    709: .Ss User specification
                    710: .Bd -literal
                    711: User_Spec ::= User_List Host_List '=' Cmnd_Spec_List \e
                    712:               (':' Host_List '=' Cmnd_Spec_List)*
                    713: 
                    714: Cmnd_Spec_List ::= Cmnd_Spec |
                    715:                    Cmnd_Spec ',' Cmnd_Spec_List
                    716: 
                    717: Cmnd_Spec ::= Runas_Spec? SELinux_Spec? Solaris_Priv_Spec? Tag_Spec* Cmnd
                    718: 
                    719: Runas_Spec ::= '(' Runas_List? (':' Runas_List)? ')'
                    720: 
                    721: SELinux_Spec ::= ('ROLE=role' | 'TYPE=type')
                    722: 
                    723: Solaris_Priv_Spec ::= ('PRIVS=privset' | 'LIMITPRIVS=privset')
                    724: 
                    725: Tag_Spec ::= ('NOPASSWD:' | 'PASSWD:' | 'NOEXEC:' | 'EXEC:' |
                    726:               'SETENV:' | 'NOSETENV:' | 'LOG_INPUT:' | 'NOLOG_INPUT:' |
                    727:               'LOG_OUTPUT:' | 'NOLOG_OUTPUT:')
                    728: .Ed
                    729: .Pp
                    730: A
                    731: .Sy user specification
                    732: determines which commands a user may run
                    733: (and as what user) on specified hosts.
                    734: By default, commands are
                    735: run as
                    736: .Sy root ,
                    737: but this can be changed on a per-command basis.
                    738: .Pp
                    739: The basic structure of a user specification is
                    740: .Dq who where = (as_whom) what .
                    741: Let's break that down into its constituent parts:
                    742: .Ss Runas_Spec
                    743: A
                    744: .Li Runas_Spec
                    745: determines the user and/or the group that a command
                    746: may be run as.
                    747: A fully-specified
                    748: .Li Runas_Spec
                    749: consists of two
                    750: .Li Runas_List Ns No s
                    751: (as defined above) separated by a colon
                    752: .Pq Ql :\&
                    753: and enclosed in a set of parentheses.
                    754: The first
                    755: .Li Runas_List
                    756: indicates
                    757: which users the command may be run as via
                    758: .Nm sudo Ns No 's
                    759: .Fl u
                    760: option.
                    761: The second defines a list of groups that can be specified via
                    762: .Nm sudo Ns No 's
                    763: .Fl g
                    764: option.
                    765: If both
                    766: .Li Runas_List Ns No s
                    767: are specified, the command may be run with any combination of users
                    768: and groups listed in their respective
                    769: .Li Runas_List Ns No s.
                    770: If only the first is specified, the command may be run as any user
                    771: in the list but no
                    772: .Fl g
                    773: option
                    774: may be specified.
                    775: If the first
                    776: .Li Runas_List
                    777: is empty but the
                    778: second is specified, the command may be run as the invoking user
                    779: with the group set to any listed in the
                    780: .Li Runas_List .
                    781: If both
                    782: .Li Runas_List Ns No s
                    783: are empty, the command may only be run as the invoking user.
                    784: If no
                    785: .Li Runas_Spec
                    786: is specified the command may be run as
                    787: .Sy root
                    788: and
                    789: no group may be specified.
                    790: .Pp
                    791: A
                    792: .Li Runas_Spec
                    793: sets the default for the commands that follow it.
                    794: What this means is that for the entry:
                    795: .Bd -literal
                    796: dgb    boulder = (operator) /bin/ls, /bin/kill, /usr/bin/lprm
                    797: .Ed
                    798: .Pp
                    799: The user
                    800: .Sy dgb
                    801: may run
                    802: .Pa /bin/ls ,
                    803: .Pa /bin/kill ,
                    804: and
                    805: .Pa /usr/bin/lprm Ns No \(em Ns but
                    806: only as
                    807: .Sy operator .
                    808: E.g.,
                    809: .Bd -literal
                    810: $ sudo -u operator /bin/ls
                    811: .Ed
                    812: .Pp
                    813: It is also possible to override a
                    814: .Li Runas_Spec
                    815: later on in an entry.
                    816: If we modify the entry like so:
                    817: .Bd -literal
                    818: dgb    boulder = (operator) /bin/ls, (root) /bin/kill, /usr/bin/lprm
                    819: .Ed
                    820: .Pp
                    821: Then user
                    822: .Sy dgb
                    823: is now allowed to run
                    824: .Pa /bin/ls
                    825: as
                    826: .Sy operator ,
                    827: but
                    828: .Pa /bin/kill
                    829: and
                    830: .Pa /usr/bin/lprm
                    831: as
                    832: .Sy root .
                    833: .Pp
                    834: We can extend this to allow
                    835: .Sy dgb
                    836: to run
                    837: .Li /bin/ls
                    838: with either
                    839: the user or group set to
                    840: .Sy operator :
                    841: .Bd -literal
                    842: dgb    boulder = (operator : operator) /bin/ls, (root) /bin/kill,\e
                    843:        /usr/bin/lprm
                    844: .Ed
                    845: .Pp
                    846: Note that while the group portion of the
                    847: .Li Runas_Spec
                    848: permits the
                    849: user to run as command with that group, it does not force the user
                    850: to do so.
                    851: If no group is specified on the command line, the command
                    852: will run with the group listed in the target user's password database
                    853: entry.
                    854: The following would all be permitted by the sudoers entry above:
                    855: .Bd -literal
                    856: $ sudo -u operator /bin/ls
                    857: $ sudo -u operator -g operator /bin/ls
                    858: $ sudo -g operator /bin/ls
                    859: .Ed
                    860: .Pp
                    861: In the following example, user
                    862: .Sy tcm
                    863: may run commands that access
                    864: a modem device file with the dialer group.
                    865: .Bd -literal
                    866: tcm    boulder = (:dialer) /usr/bin/tip, /usr/bin/cu,\e
                    867:        /usr/local/bin/minicom
                    868: .Ed
                    869: .Pp
                    870: Note that in this example only the group will be set, the command
                    871: still runs as user
                    872: .Sy tcm .
                    873: E.g.\&
                    874: .Bd -literal
                    875: $ sudo -g dialer /usr/bin/cu
                    876: .Ed
                    877: .Pp
                    878: Multiple users and groups may be present in a
                    879: .Li Runas_Spec ,
                    880: in which case the user may select any combination of users and groups via the
                    881: .Fl u
                    882: and
                    883: .Fl g
                    884: options.
                    885: In this example:
                    886: .Bd -literal
                    887: alan   ALL = (root, bin : operator, system) ALL
                    888: .Ed
                    889: .Pp
                    890: user
                    891: .Sy alan
                    892: may run any command as either user root or bin,
                    893: optionally setting the group to operator or system.
                    894: .Ss SELinux_Spec
                    895: On systems with SELinux support,
                    896: .Em sudoers
                    897: entries may optionally have an SELinux role and/or type associated
                    898: with a command.
                    899: If a role or
                    900: type is specified with the command it will override any default values
                    901: specified in
                    902: .Em sudoers .
                    903: A role or type specified on the command line,
                    904: however, will supersede the values in
                    905: .Em sudoers .
                    906: .Ss Solaris_Priv_Spec
                    907: On Solaris systems,
                    908: .Em sudoers
                    909: entries may optionally specify Solaris privilege set and/or limit
                    910: privilege set associated with a command.
                    911: If privileges or limit privileges are specified with the command
                    912: it will override any default values specified in
                    913: .Em sudoers .
                    914: .Pp
                    915: A privilege set is a comma-separated list of privilege names.
                    916: The
                    917: .Xr ppriv 1
                    918: command can be used to list all privileges known to the system.
                    919: For example:
                    920: .Bd -literal
                    921: $ ppriv -l
                    922: .Ed
                    923: .Pp
                    924: In addition, there are several
                    925: .Dq special
                    926: privilege strings:
                    927: .Bl -tag -width 8n
                    928: .It none
                    929: the empty set
                    930: .It all
                    931: the set of all privileges
                    932: .It zone
                    933: the set of all privileges available in the current zone
                    934: .It basic
                    935: the default set of privileges normal users are granted at login time
                    936: .El
                    937: .Pp
                    938: Privileges can be excluded from a set by prefixing the privilege
                    939: name with either an
                    940: .Ql \&!
                    941: or
                    942: .Ql \-
                    943: character.
                    944: .Ss Tag_Spec
                    945: A command may have zero or more tags associated with it.
                    946: There are
                    947: ten possible tag values:
                    948: .Li NOPASSWD ,
                    949: .Li PASSWD ,
                    950: .Li NOEXEC ,
                    951: .Li EXEC ,
                    952: .Li SETENV ,
                    953: .Li NOSETENV ,
                    954: .Li LOG_INPUT ,
                    955: .Li NOLOG_INPUT ,
                    956: .Li LOG_OUTPUT
                    957: and
                    958: .Li NOLOG_OUTPUT .
                    959: Once a tag is set on a
                    960: .Li Cmnd ,
                    961: subsequent
                    962: .Li Cmnd Ns No s
                    963: in the
                    964: .Li Cmnd_Spec_List ,
                    965: inherit the tag unless it is overridden by the opposite tag (in other words,
                    966: .Li PASSWD
                    967: overrides
                    968: .Li NOPASSWD
                    969: and
                    970: .Li NOEXEC
                    971: overrides
                    972: .Li EXEC ) .
                    973: .Pp
                    974: .Em NOPASSWD and PASSWD
                    975: .Pp
                    976: By default,
                    977: .Nm sudo
                    978: requires that a user authenticate him or herself
                    979: before running a command.
                    980: This behavior can be modified via the
                    981: .Li NOPASSWD
                    982: tag.
                    983: Like a
                    984: .Li Runas_Spec ,
                    985: the
                    986: .Li NOPASSWD
                    987: tag sets
                    988: a default for the commands that follow it in the
                    989: .Li Cmnd_Spec_List .
                    990: Conversely, the
                    991: .Li PASSWD
                    992: tag can be used to reverse things.
                    993: For example:
                    994: .Bd -literal
                    995: ray    rushmore = NOPASSWD: /bin/kill, /bin/ls, /usr/bin/lprm
                    996: .Ed
                    997: .Pp
                    998: would allow the user
                    999: .Sy ray
                   1000: to run
                   1001: .Pa /bin/kill ,
                   1002: .Pa /bin/ls ,
                   1003: and
                   1004: .Pa /usr/bin/lprm
                   1005: as
                   1006: .Sy root
                   1007: on the machine rushmore without authenticating himself.
                   1008: If we only want
                   1009: .Sy ray
                   1010: to be able to
                   1011: run
                   1012: .Pa /bin/kill
                   1013: without a password the entry would be:
                   1014: .Bd -literal
                   1015: ray    rushmore = NOPASSWD: /bin/kill, PASSWD: /bin/ls, /usr/bin/lprm
                   1016: .Ed
                   1017: .Pp
                   1018: Note, however, that the
                   1019: .Li PASSWD
                   1020: tag has no effect on users who are in the group specified by the
                   1021: .Em exempt_group
                   1022: option.
                   1023: .Pp
                   1024: By default, if the
                   1025: .Li NOPASSWD
                   1026: tag is applied to any of the entries for a user on the current host,
                   1027: he or she will be able to run
                   1028: .Dq Li sudo -l
                   1029: without a password.
                   1030: Additionally, a user may only run
                   1031: .Dq Li sudo -v
                   1032: without a password if the
                   1033: .Li NOPASSWD
                   1034: tag is present for all a user's entries that pertain to the current host.
                   1035: This behavior may be overridden via the
                   1036: .Em verifypw
                   1037: and
                   1038: .Em listpw
                   1039: options.
                   1040: .Pp
                   1041: .Em NOEXEC and EXEC
                   1042: .Pp
                   1043: If
                   1044: .Nm sudo
                   1045: has been compiled with
                   1046: .Em noexec
                   1047: support and the underlying operating system supports it, the
                   1048: .Li NOEXEC
                   1049: tag can be used to prevent a dynamically-linked executable from
                   1050: running further commands itself.
                   1051: .Pp
                   1052: In the following example, user
                   1053: .Sy aaron
                   1054: may run
                   1055: .Pa /usr/bin/more
                   1056: and
                   1057: .Pa /usr/bin/vi
                   1058: but shell escapes will be disabled.
                   1059: .Bd -literal
                   1060: aaron  shanty = NOEXEC: /usr/bin/more, /usr/bin/vi
                   1061: .Ed
                   1062: .Pp
                   1063: See the
                   1064: .Sx Preventing shell escapes
                   1065: section below for more details on how
                   1066: .Li NOEXEC
                   1067: works and whether or not it will work on your system.
                   1068: .Pp
                   1069: .Em SETENV and NOSETENV
                   1070: .Pp
                   1071: These tags override the value of the
                   1072: .Em setenv
                   1073: option on a per-command basis.
                   1074: Note that if
                   1075: .Li SETENV
                   1076: has been set for a command, the user may disable the
                   1077: .Em env_reset
                   1078: option from the command line via the
                   1079: .Fl E
                   1080: option.
                   1081: Additionally, environment variables set on the command
                   1082: line are not subject to the restrictions imposed by
                   1083: .Em env_check ,
                   1084: .Em env_delete ,
                   1085: or
                   1086: .Em env_keep .
                   1087: As such, only trusted users should be allowed to set variables in this manner.
                   1088: If the command matched is
                   1089: .Sy ALL ,
                   1090: the
                   1091: .Li SETENV
                   1092: tag is implied for that command; this default may be overridden by use of the
                   1093: .Li NOSETENV
                   1094: tag.
                   1095: .Pp
                   1096: .Em LOG_INPUT and NOLOG_INPUT
                   1097: .Pp
                   1098: These tags override the value of the
                   1099: .Em log_input
                   1100: option on a per-command basis.
                   1101: For more information, see the description of
                   1102: .Em log_input
                   1103: in the
                   1104: .Sx SUDOERS OPTIONS
                   1105: section below.
                   1106: .Pp
                   1107: .Em LOG_OUTPUT and NOLOG_OUTPUT
                   1108: .Pp
                   1109: These tags override the value of the
                   1110: .Em log_output
                   1111: option on a per-command basis.
                   1112: For more information, see the description of
                   1113: .Em log_output
                   1114: in the
                   1115: .Sx SUDOERS OPTIONS
                   1116: section below.
                   1117: .Ss Wildcards
                   1118: .Nm sudo
                   1119: allows shell-style
                   1120: .Em wildcards
                   1121: (aka meta or glob characters)
                   1122: to be used in host names, path names and command line arguments in the
                   1123: .Em sudoers
                   1124: file.
                   1125: Wildcard matching is done via the
                   1126: .Sy POSIX
                   1127: .Xr glob 3
                   1128: and
                   1129: .Xr fnmatch 3
                   1130: routines.
                   1131: Note that these are
                   1132: .Em not
                   1133: regular expressions.
                   1134: .Bl -tag -width 8n
                   1135: .It Li *
                   1136: Matches any set of zero or more characters.
                   1137: .It Li \&?
                   1138: Matches any single character.
                   1139: .It Li [...]
                   1140: Matches any character in the specified range.
                   1141: .It Li [!...]
                   1142: Matches any character
                   1143: .Sy not
                   1144: in the specified range.
                   1145: .It Li \ex
                   1146: For any character
                   1147: .Sq x ,
                   1148: evaluates to
                   1149: .Sq x .
                   1150: This is used to escape special characters such as:
                   1151: .Ql * ,
                   1152: .Ql \&? ,
                   1153: .Ql [\& ,
                   1154: and
                   1155: .Ql ]\& .
                   1156: .El
                   1157: .Pp
                   1158: POSIX character classes may also be used if your system's
                   1159: .Xr glob 3
                   1160: and
                   1161: .Xr fnmatch 3
                   1162: functions support them.
                   1163: However, because the
                   1164: .Ql :\&
                   1165: character has special meaning in
                   1166: .Em sudoers ,
                   1167: it must be
                   1168: escaped.
                   1169: For example:
                   1170: .Bd -literal -offset 4n
                   1171: /bin/ls [[\:alpha\:]]*
                   1172: .Ed
                   1173: .Pp
                   1174: Would match any file name beginning with a letter.
                   1175: .Pp
                   1176: Note that a forward slash
                   1177: .Pq Ql /
                   1178: will
                   1179: .Sy not
                   1180: be matched by
                   1181: wildcards used in the path name.
                   1182: This is to make a path like:
                   1183: .Bd -literal -offset 4n
                   1184: /usr/bin/*
                   1185: .Ed
                   1186: .Pp
                   1187: match
                   1188: .Pa /usr/bin/who
                   1189: but not
                   1190: .Pa /usr/bin/X11/xterm .
                   1191: .Pp
                   1192: When matching the command line arguments, however, a slash
                   1193: .Sy does
                   1194: get matched by wildcards since command line arguments may contain
                   1195: arbitrary strings and not just path names.
                   1196: .Pp
                   1197: Wildcards in command line arguments should be used with care.
                   1198: Because command line arguments are matched as a single, concatenated
                   1199: string, a wildcard such as
                   1200: .Ql \&?
                   1201: or
                   1202: .Ql *
                   1203: can match multiple words.
                   1204: For example, while a sudoers entry like:
                   1205: .Bd -literal -offset 4n
                   1206: %operator ALL = /bin/cat /var/log/messages*
                   1207: .Ed
                   1208: .Pp
                   1209: will allow command like:
                   1210: .Bd -literal -offset 4n
                   1211: $ sudo cat /var/log/messages.1
                   1212: .Ed
                   1213: .Pp
                   1214: It will also allow:
                   1215: .Bd -literal -offset 4n
                   1216: $ sudo cat /var/log/messages /etc/shadow
                   1217: .Ed
                   1218: .Pp
                   1219: which is probably not what was intended.
                   1220: .Ss Exceptions to wildcard rules
                   1221: The following exceptions apply to the above rules:
                   1222: .Bl -tag -width 8n
                   1223: .It Li \&""
                   1224: If the empty string
                   1225: .Li \&""
                   1226: is the only command line argument in the
                   1227: .Em sudoers
                   1228: entry it means that command is not allowed to be run with
                   1229: .Sy any
                   1230: arguments.
                   1231: .It sudoedit
                   1232: Command line arguments to the
                   1233: .Em sudoedit
                   1234: built-in command should always be path names, so a forward slash
                   1235: .Pq Ql /
                   1236: will not be matched by a wildcard.
                   1237: .El
                   1238: .Ss Including other files from within sudoers
                   1239: It is possible to include other
                   1240: .Em sudoers
                   1241: files from within the
                   1242: .Em sudoers
                   1243: file currently being parsed using the
                   1244: .Li #include
                   1245: and
                   1246: .Li #includedir
                   1247: directives.
                   1248: .Pp
                   1249: This can be used, for example, to keep a site-wide
                   1250: .Em sudoers
                   1251: file in addition to a local, per-machine file.
                   1252: For the sake of this example the site-wide
                   1253: .Em sudoers
                   1254: will be
                   1255: .Pa /etc/sudoers
                   1256: and the per-machine one will be
                   1257: .Pa /etc/sudoers.local .
                   1258: To include
                   1259: .Pa /etc/sudoers.local
                   1260: from within
                   1261: .Pa /etc/sudoers
                   1262: we would use the
                   1263: following line in
                   1264: .Pa /etc/sudoers :
                   1265: .Bd -literal -offset 4n
                   1266: #include /etc/sudoers.local
                   1267: .Ed
                   1268: .Pp
                   1269: When
                   1270: .Nm sudo
                   1271: reaches this line it will suspend processing of the current file
                   1272: .Pq Pa /etc/sudoers
                   1273: and switch to
                   1274: .Pa /etc/sudoers.local .
                   1275: Upon reaching the end of
                   1276: .Pa /etc/sudoers.local ,
                   1277: the rest of
                   1278: .Pa /etc/sudoers
                   1279: will be processed.
                   1280: Files that are included may themselves include other files.
                   1281: A hard limit of 128 nested include files is enforced to prevent include
                   1282: file loops.
                   1283: .Pp
                   1284: If the path to the include file is not fully-qualified (does not
                   1285: begin with a
                   1286: .Ql / ,
                   1287: it must be located in the same directory as the sudoers file it was
                   1288: included from.
                   1289: For example, if
                   1290: .Pa /etc/sudoers
                   1291: contains the line:
                   1292: .Bd -literal -offset 4n
                   1293: .Li #include sudoers.local
                   1294: .Ed
                   1295: .Pp
                   1296: the file that will be included is
                   1297: .Pa /etc/sudoers.local .
                   1298: .Pp
                   1299: The file name may also include the
                   1300: .Li %h
                   1301: escape, signifying the short form of the host name.
                   1302: In other words, if the machine's host name is
                   1303: .Dq xerxes ,
                   1304: then
                   1305: .Bd -literal -offset 4n
                   1306: #include /etc/sudoers.%h
                   1307: .Ed
                   1308: .Pp
                   1309: will cause
                   1310: .Nm sudo
                   1311: to include the file
                   1312: .Pa /etc/sudoers.xerxes .
                   1313: .Pp
                   1314: The
                   1315: .Li #includedir
                   1316: directive can be used to create a
                   1317: .Pa sudo.d
                   1318: directory that the system package manager can drop
                   1319: .Em sudoers
                   1320: rules
                   1321: into as part of package installation.
                   1322: For example, given:
                   1323: .Bd -literal -offset 4n
                   1324: #includedir /etc/sudoers.d
                   1325: .Ed
                   1326: .Pp
                   1327: .Nm sudo
                   1328: will read each file in
                   1329: .Pa /etc/sudoers.d ,
                   1330: skipping file names that end in
                   1331: .Ql ~
                   1332: or contain a
                   1333: .Ql .\&
                   1334: character to avoid causing problems with package manager or editor
                   1335: temporary/backup files.
                   1336: Files are parsed in sorted lexical order.
                   1337: That is,
                   1338: .Pa /etc/sudoers.d/01_first
                   1339: will be parsed before
                   1340: .Pa /etc/sudoers.d/10_second .
                   1341: Be aware that because the sorting is lexical, not numeric,
                   1342: .Pa /etc/sudoers.d/1_whoops
                   1343: would be loaded
                   1344: .Sy after
                   1345: .Pa /etc/sudoers.d/10_second .
                   1346: Using a consistent number of leading zeroes in the file names can be used
                   1347: to avoid such problems.
                   1348: .Pp
                   1349: Note that unlike files included via
                   1350: .Li #include ,
                   1351: .Nm visudo
                   1352: will not edit the files in a
                   1353: .Li #includedir
                   1354: directory unless one of them contains a syntax error.
                   1355: It is still possible to run
                   1356: .Nm visudo
                   1357: with the
                   1358: .Fl f
                   1359: flag to edit the files directly.
                   1360: .Ss Other special characters and reserved words
                   1361: The pound sign
                   1362: .Pq Ql #
                   1363: is used to indicate a comment (unless it is part of a #include
                   1364: directive or unless it occurs in the context of a user name and is
                   1365: followed by one or more digits, in which case it is treated as a
                   1366: uid).
                   1367: Both the comment character and any text after it, up to the end of
                   1368: the line, are ignored.
                   1369: .Pp
                   1370: The reserved word
                   1371: .Sy ALL
                   1372: is a built-in
                   1373: .Em alias
                   1374: that always causes a match to succeed.
                   1375: It can be used wherever one might otherwise use a
                   1376: .Li Cmnd_Alias ,
                   1377: .Li User_Alias ,
                   1378: .Li Runas_Alias ,
                   1379: or
                   1380: .Li Host_Alias .
                   1381: You should not try to define your own
                   1382: .Em alias
                   1383: called
                   1384: .Sy ALL
                   1385: as the built-in alias will be used in preference to your own.
                   1386: Please note that using
                   1387: .Sy ALL
                   1388: can be dangerous since in a command context, it allows the user to run
                   1389: .Sy any
                   1390: command on the system.
                   1391: .Pp
                   1392: An exclamation point
                   1393: .Pq Ql \&!
                   1394: can be used as a logical
                   1395: .Em not
                   1396: operator both in an
                   1397: .Em alias
                   1398: and in front of a
                   1399: .Li Cmnd .
                   1400: This allows one to exclude certain values.
                   1401: Note, however, that using a
                   1402: .Ql \&!
                   1403: in conjunction with the built-in
                   1404: .Sy ALL
                   1405: alias to allow a user to run
                   1406: .Dq all but a few
                   1407: commands rarely works as intended (see
                   1408: .Sx SECURITY NOTES
                   1409: below).
                   1410: .Pp
                   1411: Long lines can be continued with a backslash
                   1412: .Pq Ql \e
                   1413: as the last character on the line.
                   1414: .Pp
                   1415: White space between elements in a list as well as special syntactic
                   1416: characters in a
                   1417: .Em User Specification
                   1418: .Po
                   1419: .Ql =\& ,
                   1420: .Ql :\& ,
                   1421: .Ql (\& ,
                   1422: .Ql )\&
                   1423: .Pc
                   1424: is optional.
                   1425: .Pp
                   1426: The following characters must be escaped with a backslash
                   1427: .Pq Ql \e
                   1428: when used as part of a word (e.g.\& a user name or host name):
                   1429: .Ql \&! ,
                   1430: .Ql =\& ,
                   1431: .Ql :\& ,
                   1432: .Ql ,\& ,
                   1433: .Ql (\& ,
                   1434: .Ql )\& ,
                   1435: .Ql \e .
                   1436: .Sh SUDOERS OPTIONS
                   1437: .Nm sudo Ns No 's
                   1438: behavior can be modified by
                   1439: .Li Default_Entry
                   1440: lines, as explained earlier.
                   1441: A list of all supported Defaults parameters, grouped by type, are listed below.
                   1442: .Pp
                   1443: .Sy Boolean Flags :
                   1444: .Bl -tag -width 16n
                   1445: .It always_set_home
                   1446: If enabled,
                   1447: .Nm sudo
                   1448: will set the
                   1449: .Ev HOME
                   1450: environment variable to the home directory of the target user
                   1451: (which is root unless the
                   1452: .Fl u
                   1453: option is used).
                   1454: This effectively means that the
                   1455: .Fl H
                   1456: option is always implied.
                   1457: Note that
                   1458: .Ev HOME
                   1459: is already set when the the
                   1460: .Em env_reset
                   1461: option is enabled, so
                   1462: .Em always_set_home
                   1463: is only effective for configurations where either
                   1464: .Em env_reset
                   1465: is disabled or
                   1466: .Ev HOME
                   1467: is present in the
                   1468: .Em env_keep
                   1469: list.
                   1470: This flag is
                   1471: .Em off
                   1472: by default.
                   1473: .It authenticate
                   1474: If set, users must authenticate themselves via a password (or other
                   1475: means of authentication) before they may run commands.
                   1476: This default may be overridden via the
                   1477: .Li PASSWD
                   1478: and
                   1479: .Li NOPASSWD
                   1480: tags.
                   1481: This flag is
                   1482: .Em on
                   1483: by default.
                   1484: .It closefrom_override
                   1485: If set, the user may use
                   1486: .Nm sudo Ns No 's
                   1487: .Fl C
                   1488: option which overrides the default starting point at which
                   1489: .Nm sudo
                   1490: begins closing open file descriptors.
                   1491: This flag is
                   1492: .Em off
                   1493: by default.
                   1494: .It compress_io
                   1495: If set, and
                   1496: .Nm sudo
                   1497: is configured to log a command's input or output,
                   1498: the I/O logs will be compressed using
                   1499: .Sy zlib .
                   1500: This flag is
                   1501: .Em on
                   1502: by default when
                   1503: .Nm sudo
                   1504: is compiled with
                   1505: .Sy zlib
                   1506: support.
                   1507: .It env_editor
                   1508: If set,
                   1509: .Nm visudo
                   1510: will use the value of the
                   1511: .Ev EDITOR
                   1512: or
                   1513: .Ev VISUAL
                   1514: environment variables before falling back on the default editor list.
                   1515: Note that this may create a security hole as it allows the user to
                   1516: run any arbitrary command as root without logging.
                   1517: A safer alternative is to place a colon-separated list of editors
                   1518: in the
                   1519: .Li editor
                   1520: variable.
                   1521: .Nm visudo
                   1522: will then only use the
                   1523: .Ev EDITOR
                   1524: or
                   1525: .Ev VISUAL
                   1526: if they match a value specified in
                   1527: .Li editor .
                   1528: This flag is
                   1529: .Em @env_editor@
                   1530: by
                   1531: default.
                   1532: .It env_reset
                   1533: If set,
                   1534: .Nm sudo
                   1535: will run the command in a minimal environment containing the
                   1536: .Ev TERM ,
                   1537: .Ev PATH ,
                   1538: .Ev HOME ,
                   1539: .Ev MAIL ,
                   1540: .Ev SHELL ,
                   1541: .Ev LOGNAME ,
                   1542: .Ev USER ,
                   1543: .Ev USERNAME
                   1544: and
                   1545: .Ev SUDO_*
                   1546: variables.
                   1547: Any
                   1548: variables in the caller's environment that match the
                   1549: .Li env_keep
                   1550: and
                   1551: .Li env_check
                   1552: lists are then added, followed by any variables present in the file
                   1553: specified by the
                   1554: .Em env_file
                   1555: option (if any).
                   1556: The default contents of the
                   1557: .Li env_keep
                   1558: and
                   1559: .Li env_check
                   1560: lists are displayed when
                   1561: .Nm sudo
                   1562: is run by root with the
                   1563: .Fl V
                   1564: option.
                   1565: If the
                   1566: .Em secure_path
                   1567: option is set, its value will be used for the
                   1568: .Ev PATH
                   1569: environment variable.
                   1570: This flag is
                   1571: .Em @env_reset@
                   1572: by default.
                   1573: .It fast_glob
                   1574: Normally,
                   1575: .Nm sudo
                   1576: uses the
                   1577: .Xr glob 3
                   1578: function to do shell-style globbing when matching path names.
                   1579: However, since it accesses the file system,
                   1580: .Xr glob 3
                   1581: can take a long time to complete for some patterns, especially
                   1582: when the pattern references a network file system that is mounted
                   1583: on demand (auto mounted).
                   1584: The
                   1585: .Em fast_glob
                   1586: option causes
                   1587: .Nm sudo
                   1588: to use the
                   1589: .Xr fnmatch 3
                   1590: function, which does not access the file system to do its matching.
                   1591: The disadvantage of
                   1592: .Em fast_glob
                   1593: is that it is unable to match relative path names such as
                   1594: .Pa ./ls
                   1595: or
                   1596: .Pa ../bin/ls .
                   1597: This has security implications when path names that include globbing
                   1598: characters are used with the negation operator,
                   1599: .Ql !\& ,
                   1600: as such rules can be trivially bypassed.
                   1601: As such, this option should not be used when
                   1602: .Em sudoers
                   1603: contains rules that contain negated path names which include globbing
                   1604: characters.
                   1605: This flag is
                   1606: .Em off
                   1607: by default.
                   1608: .It fqdn
                   1609: Set this flag if you want to put fully qualified host names in the
                   1610: .Em sudoers
                   1611: file when the local host name (as returned by the
                   1612: .Li hostname
                   1613: command) does not contain the domain name.
                   1614: In other words, instead of myhost you would use myhost.mydomain.edu.
                   1615: You may still use the short form if you wish (and even mix the two).
                   1616: This option is only effective when the
                   1617: .Dq canonical
                   1618: host name, as returned by the
                   1619: .Fn getaddrinfo
                   1620: or
                   1621: .Fn gethostbyname
                   1622: function, is a fully-qualified domain name.
                   1623: This is usually the case when the system is configured to use DNS
                   1624: for host name resolution.
                   1625: .Pp
                   1626: If the system is configured to use the
                   1627: .Pa /etc/hosts
                   1628: file in preference to DNS, the
                   1629: .Dq canonical
                   1630: host name may not be fully-qualified.
                   1631: The order that sources are queried for hosts name resolution
                   1632: is usually specified in the
                   1633: .Pa @nsswitch_conf@ ,
                   1634: .Pa @netsvc_conf@ ,
                   1635: .Pa /etc/host.conf ,
                   1636: or, in some cases,
                   1637: .Pa /etc/resolv.conf
                   1638: file.
                   1639: In the
                   1640: .Pa /etc/hosts
                   1641: file, the first host name of the entry is considered to be the
                   1642: .Dq canonical
                   1643: name; subsequent names are aliases that are not used by
                   1644: .Nm sudoers .
                   1645: For example, the following hosts file line for the machine
                   1646: .Dq xyzzy
                   1647: has the fully-qualified domain name as the
                   1648: .Dq canonical
                   1649: host name, and the short version as an alias.
                   1650: .sp
                   1651: .Dl 192.168.1.1        xyzzy.sudo.ws xyzzy
                   1652: .sp
                   1653: If the machine's hosts file entry is not formatted properly, the
                   1654: .Em fqdn
                   1655: option will not be effective if it is queried before DNS.
                   1656: .Pp
                   1657: Beware that when using DNS for host name resolution, turning on
                   1658: .Em fqdn
                   1659: requires
                   1660: .Nm sudoers
                   1661: to make DNS lookups which renders
                   1662: .Nm sudo
                   1663: unusable if DNS stops working (for example if the machine is disconnected
                   1664: from the network).
                   1665: Also note that just like with the hosts file, you must use the
                   1666: .Dq canonical
                   1667: name as DNS knows it.
                   1668: That is, you may not use a host alias
                   1669: .Po
                   1670: .Li CNAME
                   1671: entry
                   1672: .Pc
                   1673: due to performance issues and the fact that there is no way to get all
                   1674: aliases from DNS.
                   1675: .Pp
                   1676: This flag is
                   1677: .Em @fqdn@
                   1678: by default.
                   1679: .It ignore_dot
                   1680: If set,
                   1681: .Nm sudo
                   1682: will ignore "." or "" (both denoting current directory) in the
                   1683: .Ev PATH
                   1684: environment variable; the
                   1685: .Ev PATH
                   1686: itself is not modified.
                   1687: This flag is
                   1688: .Em @ignore_dot@
                   1689: by default.
                   1690: .It ignore_local_sudoers
                   1691: If set via LDAP, parsing of
                   1692: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudoers
                   1693: will be skipped.
                   1694: This is intended for Enterprises that wish to prevent the usage of local
                   1695: sudoers files so that only LDAP is used.
                   1696: This thwarts the efforts of rogue operators who would attempt to add roles to
                   1697: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudoers .
                   1698: When this option is present,
                   1699: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudoers
                   1700: does not even need to exist.
                   1701: Since this option tells
                   1702: .Nm sudo
                   1703: how to behave when no specific LDAP entries have been matched, this
                   1704: sudoOption is only meaningful for the
                   1705: .Li cn=defaults
                   1706: section.
                   1707: This flag is
                   1708: .Em off
                   1709: by default.
                   1710: .It insults
                   1711: If set,
                   1712: .Nm sudo
                   1713: will insult users when they enter an incorrect password.
                   1714: This flag is
                   1715: .Em @insults@
                   1716: by default.
                   1717: .It log_host
                   1718: If set, the host name will be logged in the (non-syslog)
                   1719: .Nm sudo
                   1720: log file.
                   1721: This flag is
                   1722: .Em off
                   1723: by default.
                   1724: .It log_input
                   1725: If set,
                   1726: .Nm sudo
                   1727: will run the command in a
                   1728: .Em pseudo tty
                   1729: and log all user input.
                   1730: If the standard input is not connected to the user's tty, due to
                   1731: I/O redirection or because the command is part of a pipeline, that
                   1732: input is also captured and stored in a separate log file.
                   1733: .Pp
                   1734: Input is logged to the directory specified by the
                   1735: .Em iolog_dir
                   1736: option
                   1737: .Po
                   1738: .Pa @iolog_dir@
                   1739: by default
                   1740: .Pc
                   1741: using a unique session ID that is included in the normal
                   1742: .Nm sudo
                   1743: log line, prefixed with
                   1744: .Dq Li TSID= .
                   1745: The
                   1746: .Em iolog_file
                   1747: option may be used to control the format of the session ID.
                   1748: .Pp
                   1749: Note that user input may contain sensitive information such as
                   1750: passwords (even if they are not echoed to the screen), which will
                   1751: be stored in the log file unencrypted.
                   1752: In most cases, logging the command output via
                   1753: .Em log_output
                   1754: is all that is required.
                   1755: .It log_output
                   1756: If set,
                   1757: .Nm sudo
                   1758: will run the command in a
                   1759: .Em pseudo tty
                   1760: and log all output that is sent to the screen, similar to the
                   1761: .Xr script 1
                   1762: command.
                   1763: If the standard output or standard error is not connected to the
                   1764: user's tty, due to I/O redirection or because the command is part
                   1765: of a pipeline, that output is also captured and stored in separate
                   1766: log files.
                   1767: .Pp
                   1768: Output is logged to the directory specified by the
                   1769: .Em iolog_dir
                   1770: option
                   1771: .Po
                   1772: .Pa @iolog_dir@
                   1773: by default
                   1774: .Pc
                   1775: using a unique session ID that is included in the normal
                   1776: .Nm sudo
                   1777: log line, prefixed with
                   1778: .Dq Li TSID= .
                   1779: The
                   1780: .Em iolog_file
                   1781: option may be used to control the format of the session ID.
                   1782: .Pp
                   1783: Output logs may be viewed with the
                   1784: .Xr sudoreplay @mansectsu@
                   1785: utility, which can also be used to list or search the available logs.
                   1786: .It log_year
                   1787: If set, the four-digit year will be logged in the (non-syslog)
                   1788: .Nm sudo
                   1789: log file.
                   1790: This flag is
                   1791: .Em off
                   1792: by default.
                   1793: .It long_otp_prompt
                   1794: When validating with a One Time Password (OTP) scheme such as
                   1795: .Sy S/Key
                   1796: or
                   1797: .Sy OPIE ,
                   1798: a two-line prompt is used to make it easier
                   1799: to cut and paste the challenge to a local window.
                   1800: It's not as pretty as the default but some people find it more convenient.
                   1801: This flag is
                   1802: .Em @long_otp_prompt@
                   1803: by default.
                   1804: .It mail_always
                   1805: Send mail to the
                   1806: .Em mailto
                   1807: user every time a users runs
                   1808: .Nm sudo .
                   1809: This flag is
                   1810: .Em off
                   1811: by default.
                   1812: .It mail_badpass
                   1813: Send mail to the
                   1814: .Em mailto
                   1815: user if the user running
                   1816: .Nm sudo
                   1817: does not enter the correct password.
                   1818: If the command the user is attempting to run is not permitted by
                   1819: .Em sudoers
                   1820: and one of the
                   1821: .Em mail_always ,
                   1822: .Em mail_no_host ,
                   1823: .Em mail_no_perms
                   1824: or
                   1825: .Em mail_no_user
                   1826: flags are set, this flag will have no effect.
                   1827: This flag is
                   1828: .Em off
                   1829: by default.
                   1830: .It mail_no_host
                   1831: If set, mail will be sent to the
                   1832: .Em mailto
                   1833: user if the invoking user exists in the
                   1834: .Em sudoers
                   1835: file, but is not allowed to run commands on the current host.
                   1836: This flag is
                   1837: .Em @mail_no_host@
                   1838: by default.
                   1839: .It mail_no_perms
                   1840: If set, mail will be sent to the
                   1841: .Em mailto
                   1842: user if the invoking user is allowed to use
                   1843: .Nm sudo
                   1844: but the command they are trying is not listed in their
                   1845: .Em sudoers
                   1846: file entry or is explicitly denied.
                   1847: This flag is
                   1848: .Em @mail_no_perms@
                   1849: by default.
                   1850: .It mail_no_user
                   1851: If set, mail will be sent to the
                   1852: .Em mailto
                   1853: user if the invoking user is not in the
                   1854: .Em sudoers
                   1855: file.
                   1856: This flag is
                   1857: .Em @mail_no_user@
                   1858: by default.
                   1859: .It noexec
                   1860: If set, all commands run via
                   1861: .Nm sudo
                   1862: will behave as if the
                   1863: .Li NOEXEC
                   1864: tag has been set, unless overridden by a
                   1865: .Li EXEC
                   1866: tag.
                   1867: See the description of
                   1868: .Em NOEXEC and EXEC
                   1869: below as well as the
                   1870: .Sx Preventing shell escapes
                   1871: section at the end of this manual.
                   1872: This flag is
                   1873: .Em off
                   1874: by default.
                   1875: .It path_info
                   1876: Normally,
                   1877: .Nm sudo
                   1878: will tell the user when a command could not be
                   1879: found in their
                   1880: .Ev PATH
                   1881: environment variable.
                   1882: Some sites may wish to disable this as it could be used to gather
                   1883: information on the location of executables that the normal user does
                   1884: not have access to.
                   1885: The disadvantage is that if the executable is simply not in the user's
                   1886: .Ev PATH ,
                   1887: .Nm sudo
                   1888: will tell the user that they are not allowed to run it, which can be confusing.
                   1889: This flag is
                   1890: .Em @path_info@
                   1891: by default.
                   1892: .It passprompt_override
                   1893: The password prompt specified by
                   1894: .Em passprompt
                   1895: will normally only be used if the password prompt provided by systems
                   1896: such as PAM matches the string
                   1897: .Dq Password: .
                   1898: If
                   1899: .Em passprompt_override
                   1900: is set,
                   1901: .Em passprompt
                   1902: will always be used.
                   1903: This flag is
                   1904: .Em off
                   1905: by default.
                   1906: .It preserve_groups
                   1907: By default,
                   1908: .Nm sudo
                   1909: will initialize the group vector to the list of groups the target user is in.
                   1910: When
                   1911: .Em preserve_groups
                   1912: is set, the user's existing group vector is left unaltered.
                   1913: The real and effective group IDs, however, are still set to match the
                   1914: target user.
                   1915: This flag is
                   1916: .Em off
                   1917: by default.
                   1918: .It pwfeedback
                   1919: By default,
                   1920: .Nm sudo
                   1921: reads the password like most other Unix programs,
                   1922: by turning off echo until the user hits the return (or enter) key.
                   1923: Some users become confused by this as it appears to them that
                   1924: .Nm sudo
                   1925: has hung at this point.
                   1926: When
                   1927: .Em pwfeedback
                   1928: is set,
                   1929: .Nm sudo
                   1930: will provide visual feedback when the user presses a key.
                   1931: Note that this does have a security impact as an onlooker may be able to
                   1932: determine the length of the password being entered.
                   1933: This flag is
                   1934: .Em off
                   1935: by default.
                   1936: .It requiretty
                   1937: If set,
                   1938: .Nm sudo
                   1939: will only run when the user is logged in to a real tty.
                   1940: When this flag is set,
                   1941: .Nm sudo
                   1942: can only be run from a login session and not via other means such as
                   1943: .Xr cron @mansectsu@
                   1944: or cgi-bin scripts.
                   1945: This flag is
                   1946: .Em off
                   1947: by default.
                   1948: .It root_sudo
                   1949: If set, root is allowed to run
                   1950: .Nm sudo
                   1951: too.
                   1952: Disabling this prevents users from
                   1953: .Dq chaining
                   1954: .Nm sudo
                   1955: commands to get a root shell by doing something like
                   1956: .Dq Li sudo sudo /bin/sh .
                   1957: Note, however, that turning off
                   1958: .Em root_sudo
                   1959: will also prevent root from running
                   1960: .Nm sudoedit .
                   1961: Disabling
                   1962: .Em root_sudo
                   1963: provides no real additional security; it exists purely for historical reasons.
                   1964: This flag is
                   1965: .Em @root_sudo@
                   1966: by default.
                   1967: .It rootpw
                   1968: If set,
                   1969: .Nm sudo
                   1970: will prompt for the root password instead of the password of the invoking user.
                   1971: This flag is
                   1972: .Em off
                   1973: by default.
                   1974: .It runaspw
                   1975: If set,
                   1976: .Nm sudo
                   1977: will prompt for the password of the user defined by the
                   1978: .Em runas_default
                   1979: option (defaults to
                   1980: .Li @runas_default@ )
                   1981: instead of the password of the invoking user.
                   1982: This flag is
                   1983: .Em off
                   1984: by default.
                   1985: .It set_home
                   1986: If enabled and
                   1987: .Nm sudo
                   1988: is invoked with the
                   1989: .Fl s
                   1990: option the
                   1991: .Ev HOME
                   1992: environment variable will be set to the home directory of the target
                   1993: user (which is root unless the
                   1994: .Fl u
                   1995: option is used).
                   1996: This effectively makes the
                   1997: .Fl s
                   1998: option imply
                   1999: .Fl H .
                   2000: Note that
                   2001: .Ev HOME
                   2002: is already set when the the
                   2003: .Em env_reset
                   2004: option is enabled, so
                   2005: .Em set_home
                   2006: is only effective for configurations where either
                   2007: .Em env_reset
                   2008: is disabled
                   2009: or
                   2010: .Ev HOME
                   2011: is present in the
                   2012: .Em env_keep
                   2013: list.
                   2014: This flag is
                   2015: .Em off
                   2016: by default.
                   2017: .It set_logname
                   2018: Normally,
                   2019: .Nm sudo
                   2020: will set the
                   2021: .Ev LOGNAME ,
                   2022: .Ev USER
                   2023: and
                   2024: .Ev USERNAME
                   2025: environment variables to the name of the target user (usually root unless the
                   2026: .Fl u
                   2027: option is given).
                   2028: However, since some programs (including the RCS revision control system) use
                   2029: .Ev LOGNAME
                   2030: to determine the real identity of the user, it may be desirable to
                   2031: change this behavior.
                   2032: This can be done by negating the set_logname option.
                   2033: Note that if the
                   2034: .Em env_reset
                   2035: option has not been disabled, entries in the
                   2036: .Em env_keep
                   2037: list will override the value of
                   2038: .Em set_logname .
                   2039: This flag is
                   2040: .Em on
                   2041: by default.
                   2042: .It set_utmp
                   2043: When enabled,
                   2044: .Nm sudo
                   2045: will create an entry in the utmp (or utmpx) file when a pseudo-tty
                   2046: is allocated.
                   2047: A pseudo-tty is allocated by
                   2048: .Nm sudo
                   2049: when the
                   2050: .Em log_input ,
                   2051: .Em log_output
                   2052: or
                   2053: .Em use_pty
                   2054: flags are enabled.
                   2055: By default, the new entry will be a copy of the user's existing utmp
                   2056: entry (if any), with the tty, time, type and pid fields updated.
                   2057: This flag is
                   2058: .Em on
                   2059: by default.
                   2060: .It setenv
                   2061: Allow the user to disable the
                   2062: .Em env_reset
                   2063: option from the command line via the
                   2064: .Fl E
                   2065: option.
                   2066: Additionally, environment variables set via the command line are
                   2067: not subject to the restrictions imposed by
                   2068: .Em env_check ,
                   2069: .Em env_delete ,
                   2070: or
                   2071: .Em env_keep .
                   2072: As such, only trusted users should be allowed to set variables in this manner.
                   2073: This flag is
                   2074: .Em off
                   2075: by default.
                   2076: .It shell_noargs
                   2077: If set and
                   2078: .Nm sudo
                   2079: is invoked with no arguments it acts as if the
                   2080: .Fl s
                   2081: option had been given.
                   2082: That is, it runs a shell as root (the shell is determined by the
                   2083: .Ev SHELL
                   2084: environment variable if it is set, falling back on the shell listed
                   2085: in the invoking user's /etc/passwd entry if not).
                   2086: This flag is
                   2087: .Em off
                   2088: by default.
                   2089: .It stay_setuid
                   2090: Normally, when
                   2091: .Nm sudo
                   2092: executes a command the real and effective UIDs are set to the target
                   2093: user (root by default).
                   2094: This option changes that behavior such that the real UID is left
                   2095: as the invoking user's UID.
                   2096: In other words, this makes
                   2097: .Nm sudo
                   2098: act as a setuid wrapper.
                   2099: This can be useful on systems that disable some potentially
                   2100: dangerous functionality when a program is run setuid.
                   2101: This option is only effective on systems that support either the
                   2102: .Xr setreuid 2
                   2103: or
                   2104: .Xr setresuid 2
                   2105: system call.
                   2106: This flag is
                   2107: .Em off
                   2108: by default.
                   2109: .It targetpw
                   2110: If set,
                   2111: .Nm sudo
                   2112: will prompt for the password of the user specified
                   2113: by the
                   2114: .Fl u
                   2115: option (defaults to
                   2116: .Li root )
                   2117: instead of the password of the invoking user.
                   2118: In addition, the time stamp file name will include the target user's name.
                   2119: Note that this flag precludes the use of a uid not listed in the passwd
                   2120: database as an argument to the
                   2121: .Fl u
                   2122: option.
                   2123: This flag is
                   2124: .Em off
                   2125: by default.
                   2126: .It tty_tickets
                   2127: If set, users must authenticate on a per-tty basis.
                   2128: With this flag enabled,
                   2129: .Nm sudo
                   2130: will use a file named for the tty the user is
                   2131: logged in on in the user's time stamp directory.
                   2132: If disabled, the time stamp of the directory is used instead.
                   2133: This flag is
                   2134: .Em @tty_tickets@
                   2135: by default.
                   2136: .It umask_override
                   2137: If set,
                   2138: .Nm sudo
                   2139: will set the umask as specified by
                   2140: .Em sudoers
                   2141: without modification.
                   2142: This makes it possible to specify a more permissive umask in
                   2143: .Em sudoers
                   2144: than the user's own umask and matches historical behavior.
                   2145: If
                   2146: .Em umask_override
                   2147: is not set,
                   2148: .Nm sudo
                   2149: will set the umask to be the union of the user's umask and what is specified in
                   2150: .Em sudoers .
                   2151: This flag is
                   2152: .Em @umask_override@
                   2153: by default.
                   2154: .It use_loginclass
                   2155: If set,
                   2156: .Nm sudo
                   2157: will apply the defaults specified for the target user's login class
                   2158: if one exists.
                   2159: Only available if
                   2160: .Nm sudo
                   2161: is configured with the
                   2162: .Li --with-logincap
                   2163: option.
                   2164: This flag is
                   2165: .Em off
                   2166: by default.
                   2167: .It use_pty
                   2168: If set,
                   2169: .Nm sudo
                   2170: will run the command in a pseudo-pty even if no I/O logging is being gone.
                   2171: A malicious program run under
                   2172: .Nm sudo
                   2173: could conceivably fork a background process that retains to the user's
                   2174: terminal device after the main program has finished executing.
                   2175: Use of this option will make that impossible.
                   2176: This flag is
                   2177: .Em off
                   2178: by default.
                   2179: .It utmp_runas
                   2180: If set,
                   2181: .Nm sudo
                   2182: will store the name of the runas user when updating the utmp (or utmpx) file.
                   2183: By default,
                   2184: .Nm sudo
                   2185: stores the name of the invoking user.
                   2186: This flag is
                   2187: .Em off
                   2188: by default.
                   2189: .It visiblepw
                   2190: By default,
                   2191: .Nm sudo
                   2192: will refuse to run if the user must enter a password but it is not
                   2193: possible to disable echo on the terminal.
                   2194: If the
                   2195: .Em visiblepw
                   2196: flag is set,
                   2197: .Nm sudo
                   2198: will prompt for a password even when it would be visible on the screen.
                   2199: This makes it possible to run things like
                   2200: .Dq Li ssh somehost sudo ls
                   2201: since by default,
                   2202: .Xr ssh 1
                   2203: does
                   2204: not allocate a tty when running a command.
                   2205: This flag is
                   2206: .Em off
                   2207: by default.
                   2208: .El
                   2209: .Pp
                   2210: .Sy Integers :
                   2211: .Bl -tag -width 16n
                   2212: .It closefrom
                   2213: Before it executes a command,
                   2214: .Nm sudo
                   2215: will close all open file descriptors other than standard input,
                   2216: standard output and standard error (ie: file descriptors 0-2).
                   2217: The
                   2218: .Em closefrom
                   2219: option can be used to specify a different file descriptor at which
                   2220: to start closing.
                   2221: The default is
                   2222: .Li 3 .
                   2223: .It passwd_tries
                   2224: The number of tries a user gets to enter his/her password before
                   2225: .Nm sudo
                   2226: logs the failure and exits.
                   2227: The default is
                   2228: .Li @passwd_tries@ .
                   2229: .El
                   2230: .Pp
                   2231: .Sy Integers that can be used in a boolean context :
                   2232: .Bl -tag -width 16n
                   2233: .It loglinelen
                   2234: Number of characters per line for the file log.
                   2235: This value is used to decide when to wrap lines for nicer log files.
                   2236: This has no effect on the syslog log file, only the file log.
                   2237: The default is
                   2238: .Li @loglen@
                   2239: (use 0 or negate the option to disable word wrap).
                   2240: .It passwd_timeout
                   2241: Number of minutes before the
                   2242: .Nm sudo
                   2243: password prompt times out, or
                   2244: .Li 0
                   2245: for no timeout.
                   2246: The timeout may include a fractional component
                   2247: if minute granularity is insufficient, for example
                   2248: .Li 2.5 .
                   2249: The
                   2250: default is
                   2251: .Li @password_timeout@ .
                   2252: .It timestamp_timeout
                   2253: Number of minutes that can elapse before
                   2254: .Nm sudo
                   2255: will ask for a passwd again.
                   2256: The timeout may include a fractional component if
                   2257: minute granularity is insufficient, for example
                   2258: .Li 2.5 .
                   2259: The default is
                   2260: .Li @timeout@ .
                   2261: Set this to
                   2262: .Li 0
                   2263: to always prompt for a password.
                   2264: If set to a value less than
                   2265: .Li 0
                   2266: the user's time stamp will never expire.
                   2267: This can be used to allow users to create or delete their own time stamps via
                   2268: .Dq Li sudo -v
                   2269: and
                   2270: .Dq Li sudo -k
                   2271: respectively.
                   2272: .It umask
                   2273: Umask to use when running the command.
                   2274: Negate this option or set it to 0777 to preserve the user's umask.
                   2275: The actual umask that is used will be the union of the user's umask
                   2276: and the value of the
                   2277: .Em umask
                   2278: option, which defaults to
                   2279: .Li @sudo_umask@ .
                   2280: This guarantees
                   2281: that
                   2282: .Nm sudo
                   2283: never lowers the umask when running a command.
                   2284: Note: on systems that use PAM, the default PAM configuration may specify
                   2285: its own umask which will override the value set in
                   2286: .Em sudoers .
                   2287: .El
                   2288: .Pp
                   2289: .Sy Strings :
                   2290: .Bl -tag -width 16n
                   2291: .It badpass_message
                   2292: Message that is displayed if a user enters an incorrect password.
                   2293: The default is
                   2294: .Li @badpass_message@
                   2295: unless insults are enabled.
                   2296: .It editor
                   2297: A colon
                   2298: .Pq Ql :\&
                   2299: separated list of editors allowed to be used with
                   2300: .Nm visudo .
                   2301: .Nm visudo
                   2302: will choose the editor that matches the user's
                   2303: .Ev EDITOR
                   2304: environment variable if possible, or the first editor in the
                   2305: list that exists and is executable.
                   2306: The default is
                   2307: .Pa @editor@ .
                   2308: .It iolog_dir
                   2309: The top-level directory to use when constructing the path name for
                   2310: the input/output log directory.
                   2311: Only used if the
                   2312: .Em log_input
                   2313: or
                   2314: .Em log_output
                   2315: options are enabled or when the
                   2316: .Li LOG_INPUT
                   2317: or
                   2318: .Li LOG_OUTPUT
                   2319: tags are present for a command.
                   2320: The session sequence number, if any, is stored in the directory.
                   2321: The default is
                   2322: .Pa @iolog_dir@ .
                   2323: .Pp
                   2324: The following percent
                   2325: .Pq Ql %
                   2326: escape sequences are supported:
                   2327: .Bl -tag -width 4n
                   2328: .It Li %{seq}
                   2329: expanded to a monotonically increasing base-36 sequence number, such as 0100A5,
                   2330: where every two digits are used to form a new directory, e.g.\&
                   2331: .Pa 01/00/A5
                   2332: .It Li %{user}
                   2333: expanded to the invoking user's login name
                   2334: .It Li %{group}
                   2335: expanded to the name of the invoking user's real group ID
                   2336: .It Li %{runas_user}
                   2337: expanded to the login name of the user the command will
                   2338: be run as (e.g.\& root)
                   2339: .It Li %{runas_group}
                   2340: expanded to the group name of the user the command will
                   2341: be run as (e.g.\& wheel)
                   2342: .It Li %{hostname}
                   2343: expanded to the local host name without the domain name
                   2344: .It Li %{command}
                   2345: expanded to the base name of the command being run
                   2346: .El
                   2347: .Pp
                   2348: In addition, any escape sequences supported by the system's
                   2349: .Xr strftime 3
                   2350: function will be expanded.
                   2351: .Pp
                   2352: To include a literal
                   2353: .Ql %
                   2354: character, the string
                   2355: .Ql %%
                   2356: should be used.
                   2357: .It iolog_file
                   2358: The path name, relative to
                   2359: .Em iolog_dir ,
                   2360: in which to store input/output logs when the
                   2361: .Em log_input
                   2362: or
                   2363: .Em log_output
                   2364: options are enabled or when the
                   2365: .Li LOG_INPUT
                   2366: or
                   2367: .Li LOG_OUTPUT
                   2368: tags are present for a command.
                   2369: Note that
                   2370: .Em iolog_file
                   2371: may contain directory components.
                   2372: The default is
                   2373: .Dq Li %{seq} .
                   2374: .Pp
                   2375: See the
                   2376: .Em iolog_dir
                   2377: option above for a list of supported percent
                   2378: .Pq Ql %
                   2379: escape sequences.
                   2380: .Pp
                   2381: In addition to the escape sequences, path names that end in six or
                   2382: more
                   2383: .Li X Ns No s
                   2384: will have the
                   2385: .Li X Ns No s
                   2386: replaced with a unique combination of digits and letters, similar to the
                   2387: .Xr mktemp 3
                   2388: function.
                   2389: .It limitprivs
                   2390: The default Solaris limit privileges to use when constructing a new
                   2391: privilege set for a command.
                   2392: This bounds all privileges of the executing process.
                   2393: The default limit privileges may be overridden on a per-command basis in
                   2394: .Em sudoers .
                   2395: This option is only available if
                   2396: .Nm
                   2397: is built on Solaris 10 or higher.
                   2398: .It mailsub
                   2399: Subject of the mail sent to the
                   2400: .Em mailto
                   2401: user.
                   2402: The escape
                   2403: .Li %h
                   2404: will expand to the host name of the machine.
                   2405: Default is
                   2406: .Dq Li @mailsub@ .
                   2407: .It noexec_file
                   2408: This option is no longer supported.
                   2409: The path to the noexec file should now be set in the
                   2410: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudo.conf
                   2411: file.
                   2412: .It passprompt
                   2413: The default prompt to use when asking for a password; can be overridden via the
                   2414: .Fl p
                   2415: option or the
                   2416: .Ev SUDO_PROMPT
                   2417: environment variable.
                   2418: The following percent
                   2419: .Pq Ql %
                   2420: escape sequences are supported:
                   2421: .Bl -tag -width 4n
                   2422: .It Li %H
                   2423: expanded to the local host name including the domain name
                   2424: (only if the machine's host name is fully qualified or the
                   2425: .Em fqdn
                   2426: option is set)
                   2427: .It Li %h
                   2428: expanded to the local host name without the domain name
                   2429: .It Li %p
                   2430: expanded to the user whose password is being asked for (respects the
                   2431: .Em rootpw ,
                   2432: .Em targetpw
                   2433: and
                   2434: .Em runaspw
                   2435: flags in
                   2436: .Em sudoers )
                   2437: .It Li \&%U
                   2438: expanded to the login name of the user the command will
                   2439: be run as (defaults to root)
                   2440: .It Li %u
                   2441: expanded to the invoking user's login name
                   2442: .It Li %%
                   2443: two consecutive
                   2444: .Li %
                   2445: characters are collapsed into a single
                   2446: .Li %
                   2447: character
                   2448: .El
                   2449: .Pp
                   2450: The default value is
                   2451: .Dq Li @passprompt@ .
                   2452: .It privs
                   2453: The default Solaris privileges to use when constructing a new
                   2454: privilege set for a command.
                   2455: This is passed to the executing process via the inherited privilege set,
                   2456: but is bounded by the limit privileges.
                   2457: If the
                   2458: .Em privs
                   2459: option is specified but the
                   2460: .Em limitprivs
                   2461: option is not, the limit privileges of the executing process is set to
                   2462: .Em privs .
                   2463: The default privileges may be overridden on a per-command basis in
                   2464: .Em sudoers .
                   2465: This option is only available if
                   2466: .Nm
                   2467: is built on Solaris 10 or higher.
                   2468: .It role
                   2469: The default SELinux role to use when constructing a new security
                   2470: context to run the command.
                   2471: The default role may be overridden on a per-command basis in
                   2472: .Em sudoers
                   2473: or via command line options.
                   2474: This option is only available when
                   2475: .Nm sudo
                   2476: is built with SELinux support.
                   2477: .It runas_default
                   2478: The default user to run commands as if the
                   2479: .Fl u
                   2480: option is not specified on the command line.
                   2481: This defaults to
                   2482: .Li @runas_default@ .
                   2483: .It syslog_badpri
                   2484: Syslog priority to use when user authenticates unsuccessfully.
                   2485: Defaults to
                   2486: .Li @badpri@ .
                   2487: .Pp
                   2488: The following syslog priorities are supported:
                   2489: .Sy alert ,
                   2490: .Sy crit ,
                   2491: .Sy debug ,
                   2492: .Sy emerg ,
                   2493: .Sy err ,
                   2494: .Sy info ,
                   2495: .Sy notice ,
                   2496: and
                   2497: .Sy warning .
                   2498: .It syslog_goodpri
                   2499: Syslog priority to use when user authenticates successfully.
                   2500: Defaults to
                   2501: .Li @goodpri@ .
                   2502: .Pp
                   2503: See
                   2504: .Sx syslog_badpri
                   2505: for the list of supported syslog priorities.
                   2506: .It sudoers_locale
                   2507: Locale to use when parsing the sudoers file, logging commands, and
                   2508: sending email.
                   2509: Note that changing the locale may affect how sudoers is interpreted.
                   2510: Defaults to
                   2511: .Dq Li C .
                   2512: .It timestampdir
                   2513: The directory in which
                   2514: .Nm sudo
                   2515: stores its time stamp files.
                   2516: The default is
                   2517: .Pa @timedir@ .
                   2518: .It timestampowner
                   2519: The owner of the time stamp directory and the time stamps stored therein.
                   2520: The default is
                   2521: .Li root .
                   2522: .It type
                   2523: The default SELinux type to use when constructing a new security
                   2524: context to run the command.
                   2525: The default type may be overridden on a per-command basis in
                   2526: .Em sudoers
                   2527: or via command line options.
                   2528: This option is only available when
                   2529: .Nm sudo
                   2530: is built with SELinux support.
                   2531: .El
                   2532: .Pp
                   2533: .Sy Strings that can be used in a boolean context :
                   2534: .Bl -tag -width 12n
                   2535: .It env_file
                   2536: The
                   2537: .Em env_file
                   2538: option specifies the fully qualified path to a file containing variables
                   2539: to be set in the environment of the program being run.
                   2540: Entries in this file should either be of the form
                   2541: .Dq Li VARIABLE=value
                   2542: or
                   2543: .Dq Li export VARIABLE=value .
                   2544: The value may optionally be surrounded by single or double quotes.
                   2545: Variables in this file are subject to other
                   2546: .Nm sudo
                   2547: environment settings such as
                   2548: .Em env_keep
                   2549: and
                   2550: .Em env_check .
                   2551: .It exempt_group
                   2552: Users in this group are exempt from password and PATH requirements.
                   2553: The group name specified should not include a
                   2554: .Li %
                   2555: prefix.
                   2556: This is not set by default.
                   2557: .It group_plugin
                   2558: A string containing a
                   2559: .Em sudoers
                   2560: group plugin with optional arguments.
                   2561: This can be used to implement support for the
                   2562: .Li nonunix_group
                   2563: syntax described earlier.
                   2564: The string should consist of the plugin
                   2565: path, either fully-qualified or relative to the
                   2566: .Pa @prefix@/libexec
                   2567: directory, followed by any configuration arguments the plugin requires.
                   2568: These arguments (if any) will be passed to the plugin's initialization function.
                   2569: If arguments are present, the string must be enclosed in double quotes
                   2570: .Pq \&"" .
                   2571: .Pp
                   2572: For example, given
                   2573: .Pa /etc/sudo-group ,
                   2574: a group file in Unix group format, the sample group plugin can be used:
                   2575: .Bd -literal
                   2576: Defaults group_plugin="sample_group.so /etc/sudo-group"
                   2577: .Ed
                   2578: .Pp
                   2579: For more information see
                   2580: .Xr sudo_plugin @mansectform@ .
                   2581: .It lecture
                   2582: This option controls when a short lecture will be printed along with
                   2583: the password prompt.
                   2584: It has the following possible values:
                   2585: .Bl -tag -width 6n
                   2586: .It always
                   2587: Always lecture the user.
                   2588: .It never
                   2589: Never lecture the user.
                   2590: .It once
                   2591: Only lecture the user the first time they run
                   2592: .Nm sudo .
                   2593: .El
                   2594: .Pp
                   2595: If no value is specified, a value of
                   2596: .Em once
                   2597: is implied.
                   2598: Negating the option results in a value of
                   2599: .Em never
                   2600: being used.
                   2601: The default value is
                   2602: .Em @lecture@ .
                   2603: .It lecture_file
                   2604: Path to a file containing an alternate
                   2605: .Nm sudo
                   2606: lecture that will be used in place of the standard lecture if the named
                   2607: file exists.
                   2608: By default,
                   2609: .Nm sudo
                   2610: uses a built-in lecture.
                   2611: .It listpw
                   2612: This option controls when a password will be required when a user runs
                   2613: .Nm sudo
                   2614: with the
                   2615: .Fl l
                   2616: option.
                   2617: It has the following possible values:
                   2618: .Bl -tag -width 8n
                   2619: .It all
                   2620: All the user's
                   2621: .Em sudoers
                   2622: entries for the current host must have
                   2623: the
                   2624: .Li NOPASSWD
                   2625: flag set to avoid entering a password.
                   2626: .It always
                   2627: The user must always enter a password to use the
                   2628: .Fl l
                   2629: option.
                   2630: .It any
                   2631: At least one of the user's
                   2632: .Em sudoers
                   2633: entries for the current host
                   2634: must have the
                   2635: .Li NOPASSWD
                   2636: flag set to avoid entering a password.
                   2637: .It never
                   2638: The user need never enter a password to use the
                   2639: .Fl l
                   2640: option.
                   2641: .El
                   2642: .Pp
                   2643: If no value is specified, a value of
                   2644: .Em any
                   2645: is implied.
                   2646: Negating the option results in a value of
                   2647: .Em never
                   2648: being used.
                   2649: The default value is
                   2650: .Em any .
                   2651: .It logfile
                   2652: Path to the
                   2653: .Nm sudo
                   2654: log file (not the syslog log file).
                   2655: Setting a path turns on logging to a file;
                   2656: negating this option turns it off.
                   2657: By default,
                   2658: .Nm sudo
                   2659: logs via syslog.
                   2660: .It mailerflags
                   2661: Flags to use when invoking mailer. Defaults to
                   2662: .Fl t .
                   2663: .It mailerpath
                   2664: Path to mail program used to send warning mail.
                   2665: Defaults to the path to sendmail found at configure time.
                   2666: .It mailfrom
                   2667: Address to use for the
                   2668: .Dq from
                   2669: address when sending warning and error mail.
                   2670: The address should be enclosed in double quotes
                   2671: .Pq \&""
                   2672: to protect against
                   2673: .Nm sudo
                   2674: interpreting the
                   2675: .Li @
                   2676: sign.
                   2677: Defaults to the name of the user running
                   2678: .Nm sudo .
                   2679: .It mailto
                   2680: Address to send warning and error mail to.
                   2681: The address should be enclosed in double quotes
                   2682: .Pq \&""
                   2683: to protect against
                   2684: .Nm sudo
                   2685: interpreting the
                   2686: .Li @
                   2687: sign.
                   2688: Defaults to
                   2689: .Li @mailto@ .
                   2690: .It secure_path
                   2691: Path used for every command run from
                   2692: .Nm sudo .
                   2693: If you don't trust the
                   2694: people running
                   2695: .Nm sudo
                   2696: to have a sane
                   2697: .Ev PATH
                   2698: environment variable you may want to use this.
                   2699: Another use is if you want to have the
                   2700: .Dq root path
                   2701: be separate from the
                   2702: .Dq user path .
                   2703: Users in the group specified by the
                   2704: .Em exempt_group
                   2705: option are not affected by
                   2706: .Em secure_path .
                   2707: This option is @secure_path@ by default.
                   2708: .It syslog
                   2709: Syslog facility if syslog is being used for logging (negate to
                   2710: disable syslog logging).
                   2711: Defaults to
                   2712: .Li @logfac@ .
                   2713: .Pp
                   2714: The following syslog facilities are supported:
                   2715: .Sy authpriv
                   2716: (if your
                   2717: OS supports it),
                   2718: .Sy auth ,
                   2719: .Sy daemon ,
                   2720: .Sy user ,
                   2721: .Sy local0 ,
                   2722: .Sy local1 ,
                   2723: .Sy local2 ,
                   2724: .Sy local3 ,
                   2725: .Sy local4 ,
                   2726: .Sy local5 ,
                   2727: .Sy local6 ,
                   2728: and
                   2729: .Sy local7 .
                   2730: .It verifypw
                   2731: This option controls when a password will be required when a user runs
                   2732: .Nm sudo
                   2733: with the
                   2734: .Fl v
                   2735: option.
                   2736: It has the following possible values:
                   2737: .Bl -tag -width 6n
                   2738: .It all
                   2739: All the user's
                   2740: .Em sudoers
                   2741: entries for the current host must have the
                   2742: .Li NOPASSWD
                   2743: flag set to avoid entering a password.
                   2744: .It always
                   2745: The user must always enter a password to use the
                   2746: .Fl v
                   2747: option.
                   2748: .It any
                   2749: At least one of the user's
                   2750: .Em sudoers
                   2751: entries for the current host must have the
                   2752: .Li NOPASSWD
                   2753: flag set to avoid entering a password.
                   2754: .It never
                   2755: The user need never enter a password to use the
                   2756: .Fl v
                   2757: option.
                   2758: .El
                   2759: .Pp
                   2760: If no value is specified, a value of
                   2761: .Em all
                   2762: is implied.
                   2763: Negating the option results in a value of
                   2764: .Em never
                   2765: being used.
                   2766: The default value is
                   2767: .Em all .
                   2768: .El
                   2769: .Pp
                   2770: .Sy Lists that can be used in a boolean context :
                   2771: .Bl -tag -width 16n
                   2772: .It env_check
                   2773: Environment variables to be removed from the user's environment if
                   2774: the variable's value contains
                   2775: .Ql %
                   2776: or
                   2777: .Ql /
                   2778: characters.
                   2779: This can be used to guard against printf-style format vulnerabilities
                   2780: in poorly-written programs.
                   2781: The argument may be a double-quoted, space-separated list or a
                   2782: single value without double-quotes.
                   2783: The list can be replaced, added to, deleted from, or disabled by using
                   2784: the
                   2785: .Li = ,
                   2786: .Li += ,
                   2787: .Li -= ,
                   2788: and
                   2789: .Li \&!
                   2790: operators respectively.
                   2791: Regardless of whether the
                   2792: .Li env_reset
                   2793: option is enabled or disabled, variables specified by
                   2794: .Li env_check
                   2795: will be preserved in the environment if they pass the aforementioned check.
                   2796: The default list of environment variables to check is displayed when
                   2797: .Nm sudo
                   2798: is run by root with
                   2799: the
                   2800: .Fl V
                   2801: option.
                   2802: .It env_delete
                   2803: Environment variables to be removed from the user's environment when the
                   2804: .Em env_reset
                   2805: option is not in effect.
                   2806: The argument may be a double-quoted, space-separated list or a
                   2807: single value without double-quotes.
                   2808: The list can be replaced, added to, deleted from, or disabled by using the
                   2809: .Li = ,
                   2810: .Li += ,
                   2811: .Li -= ,
                   2812: and
                   2813: .Li \&!
                   2814: operators respectively.
                   2815: The default list of environment variables to remove is displayed when
                   2816: .Nm sudo
                   2817: is run by root with the
                   2818: .Fl V
                   2819: option.
                   2820: Note that many operating systems will remove potentially dangerous
                   2821: variables from the environment of any setuid process (such as
                   2822: .Nm sudo ) .
                   2823: .It env_keep
                   2824: Environment variables to be preserved in the user's environment when the
                   2825: .Em env_reset
                   2826: option is in effect.
                   2827: This allows fine-grained control over the environment
                   2828: .Nm sudo Ns No -spawned
                   2829: processes will receive.
                   2830: The argument may be a double-quoted, space-separated list or a
                   2831: single value without double-quotes.
                   2832: The list can be replaced, added to, deleted from, or disabled by using the
                   2833: .Li = ,
                   2834: .Li += ,
                   2835: .Li -= ,
                   2836: and
                   2837: .Li \&!
                   2838: operators respectively.
                   2839: The default list of variables to keep
                   2840: is displayed when
                   2841: .Nm sudo
                   2842: is run by root with the
                   2843: .Fl V
                   2844: option.
                   2845: .El
                   2846: .Sh LOG FORMAT
                   2847: .Nm sudoers
                   2848: can log events using either
                   2849: .Xr syslog 3
                   2850: or a simple log file.
                   2851: In each case the log format is almost identical.
                   2852: .Ss Accepted command log entries
                   2853: Commands that sudo runs are logged using the following format (split
                   2854: into multiple lines for readability):
                   2855: .Bd -literal -offset 4n
                   2856: date hostname progname: username : TTY=ttyname ; PWD=cwd ; \e
                   2857:     USER=runasuser ; GROUP=runasgroup ; TSID=logid ; \e
                   2858:     ENV=env_vars COMMAND=command
                   2859: .Ed
                   2860: .Pp
                   2861: Where the fields are as follows:
                   2862: .Bl -tag -width 12n
                   2863: .It date
                   2864: The date the command was run.
                   2865: Typically, this is in the format
                   2866: .Dq MMM, DD, HH:MM:SS .
                   2867: If logging via
                   2868: .Xr syslog 3 ,
                   2869: the actual date format is controlled by the syslog daemon.
                   2870: If logging to a file and the
                   2871: .Em log_year
                   2872: option is enabled,
                   2873: the date will also include the year.
                   2874: .It hostname
                   2875: The name of the host
                   2876: .Nm sudo
                   2877: was run on.
                   2878: This field is only present when logging via
                   2879: .Xr syslog 3 .
                   2880: .It progname
                   2881: The name of the program, usually
                   2882: .Em sudo
                   2883: or
                   2884: .Em sudoedit .
                   2885: This field is only present when logging via
                   2886: .Xr syslog 3 .
                   2887: .It username
                   2888: The login name of the user who ran
                   2889: .Nm sudo .
                   2890: .It ttyname
                   2891: The short name of the terminal (e.g.\&
                   2892: .Dq console ,
                   2893: .Dq tty01 ,
                   2894: or
                   2895: .Dq pts/0 )
                   2896: .Nm sudo
                   2897: was run on, or
                   2898: .Dq unknown
                   2899: if there was no terminal present.
                   2900: .It cwd
                   2901: The current working directory that
                   2902: .Nm sudo
                   2903: was run in.
                   2904: .It runasuser
                   2905: The user the command was run as.
                   2906: .It runasgroup
                   2907: The group the command was run as if one was specified on the command line.
                   2908: .It logid
                   2909: An I/O log identifier that can be used to replay the command's output.
                   2910: This is only present when the
                   2911: .Em log_input
                   2912: or
                   2913: .Em log_output
                   2914: option is enabled.
                   2915: .It env_vars
                   2916: A list of environment variables specified on the command line,
                   2917: if specified.
                   2918: .It command
                   2919: The actual command that was executed.
                   2920: .El
                   2921: .Pp
                   2922: Messages are logged using the locale specified by
                   2923: .Em sudoers_locale ,
                   2924: which defaults to the
                   2925: .Dq Li C
                   2926: locale.
                   2927: .Ss Denied command log entries
                   2928: If the user is not allowed to run the command, the reason for the denial
                   2929: will follow the user name.
                   2930: Possible reasons include:
                   2931: .Bl -tag -width 4
                   2932: .It user NOT in sudoers
                   2933: The user is not listed in the
                   2934: .Em sudoers
                   2935: file.
                   2936: .It user NOT authorized on host
                   2937: The user is listed in the
                   2938: .Em sudoers
                   2939: file but is not allowed to run commands on the host.
                   2940: .It command not allowed
                   2941: The user is listed in the
                   2942: .Em sudoers
                   2943: file for the host but they are not allowed to run the specified command.
                   2944: .It 3 incorrect password attempts
                   2945: The user failed to enter their password after 3 tries.
                   2946: The actual number of tries will vary based on the number of
                   2947: failed attempts and the value of the
                   2948: .Em passwd_tries
                   2949: option.
                   2950: .It a password is required
                   2951: .Nm sudo Ns No 's
                   2952: .Fl n
                   2953: option was specified but a password was required.
                   2954: .It sorry, you are not allowed to set the following environment variables
                   2955: The user specified environment variables on the command line that
                   2956: were not allowed by
                   2957: .Em sudoers .
                   2958: .El
                   2959: .Ss Error log entries
                   2960: If an error occurs,
                   2961: .Nm sudoers
                   2962: will log a message and, in most cases, send a message to the
                   2963: administrator via email.
                   2964: Possible errors include:
                   2965: .Bl -tag -width 4
                   2966: .It parse error in @sysconfdir@/sudoers near line N
                   2967: .Nm sudoers
                   2968: encountered an error when parsing the specified file.
                   2969: In some cases, the actual error may be one line above or below the
                   2970: line number listed, depending on the type of error.
                   2971: .It problem with defaults entries
                   2972: The
                   2973: .Em sudoers
                   2974: file contains one or more unknown Defaults settings.
                   2975: This does not prevent
                   2976: .Nm sudo
                   2977: from running, but the
                   2978: .Em sudoers
                   2979: file should be checked using
                   2980: .Nm visudo .
                   2981: .It timestamp owner (username): \&No such user
                   2982: The time stamp directory owner, as specified by the
                   2983: .Em timestampowner
                   2984: setting, could not be found in the password database.
                   2985: .It unable to open/read @sysconfdir@/sudoers
                   2986: The
                   2987: .Em sudoers
                   2988: file could not be opened for reading.
                   2989: This can happen when the
                   2990: .Em sudoers
                   2991: file is located on a remote file system that maps user ID 0 to
                   2992: a different value.
                   2993: Normally,
                   2994: .Nm sudoers
                   2995: tries to open
                   2996: .Em sudoers
                   2997: using group permissions to avoid this problem.
                   2998: Consider changing the ownership of
                   2999: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudoers
                   3000: by adding an option like
                   3001: .Dq sudoers_uid=N
                   3002: (where
                   3003: .Sq N
                   3004: is the user ID that owns the
                   3005: .Em sudoers
                   3006: file) to the
                   3007: .Nm sudoers
                   3008: plugin line in the
                   3009: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudo.conf
                   3010: file.
                   3011: .It unable to stat @sysconfdir@/sudoers
                   3012: The
                   3013: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudoers
                   3014: file is missing.
                   3015: .It @sysconfdir@/sudoers is not a regular file
                   3016: The
                   3017: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudoers
                   3018: file exists but is not a regular file or symbolic link.
                   3019: .It @sysconfdir@/sudoers is owned by uid N, should be 0
                   3020: The
                   3021: .Em sudoers
                   3022: file has the wrong owner.
                   3023: If you wish to change the
                   3024: .Em sudoers
                   3025: file owner, please add
                   3026: .Dq sudoers_uid=N
                   3027: (where
                   3028: .Sq N
                   3029: is the user ID that owns the
                   3030: .Em sudoers
                   3031: file) to the
                   3032: .Nm sudoers
                   3033: plugin line in the
                   3034: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudo.conf
                   3035: file.
                   3036: .It @sysconfdir@/sudoers is world writable
                   3037: The permissions on the
                   3038: .Em sudoers
                   3039: file allow all users to write to it.
                   3040: The
                   3041: .Em sudoers
                   3042: file must not be world-writable, the default file mode
                   3043: is 0440 (readable by owner and group, writable by none).
                   3044: The default mode may be changed via the
                   3045: .Dq sudoers_mode
                   3046: option to the
                   3047: .Nm sudoers
                   3048: plugin line in the
                   3049: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudo.conf
                   3050: file.
                   3051: .It @sysconfdir@/sudoers is owned by gid N, should be 1
                   3052: The
                   3053: .Em sudoers
                   3054: file has the wrong group ownership.
                   3055: If you wish to change the
                   3056: .Em sudoers
                   3057: file group ownership, please add
                   3058: .Dq sudoers_gid=N
                   3059: (where
                   3060: .Sq N
                   3061: is the group ID that owns the
                   3062: .Em sudoers
                   3063: file) to the
                   3064: .Nm sudoers
                   3065: plugin line in the
                   3066: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudo.conf
                   3067: file.
                   3068: .It unable to open @timedir@/username/ttyname
                   3069: .Em sudoers
                   3070: was unable to read or create the user's time stamp file.
                   3071: .It unable to write to @timedir@/username/ttyname
                   3072: .Em sudoers
                   3073: was unable to write to the user's time stamp file.
                   3074: .It unable to mkdir to @timedir@/username
                   3075: .Em sudoers
                   3076: was unable to create the user's time stamp directory.
                   3077: .El
                   3078: .Ss Notes on logging via syslog
                   3079: By default,
                   3080: .Em sudoers
                   3081: logs messages via
                   3082: .Xr syslog 3 .
                   3083: The
                   3084: .Em date ,
                   3085: .Em hostname ,
                   3086: and
                   3087: .Em progname
                   3088: fields are added by the syslog daemon, not
                   3089: .Em sudoers
                   3090: itself.
                   3091: As such, they may vary in format on different systems.
                   3092: .Pp
                   3093: On most systems,
                   3094: .Xr syslog 3
                   3095: has a relatively small log buffer.
                   3096: To prevent the command line arguments from being truncated,
                   3097: .Nm sudoers
                   3098: will split up log messages that are larger than 960 characters
                   3099: (not including the date, hostname, and the string
                   3100: .Dq sudo ) .
                   3101: When a message is split, additional parts will include the string
                   3102: .Dq Pq command continued
                   3103: after the user name and before the continued command line arguments.
                   3104: .Ss Notes on logging to a file
                   3105: If the
                   3106: .Em logfile
                   3107: option is set,
                   3108: .Em sudoers
                   3109: will log to a local file, such as
                   3110: .Pa /var/log/sudo .
                   3111: When logging to a file,
                   3112: .Em sudoers
                   3113: uses a format similar to
                   3114: .Xr syslog 3 ,
                   3115: with a few important differences:
                   3116: .Bl -enum
                   3117: .It
                   3118: The
                   3119: .Em progname
                   3120: and
                   3121: .Em hostname
                   3122: fields are not present.
                   3123: .It
                   3124: If the
                   3125: .Em log_year
                   3126: option is enabled,
                   3127: the date will also include the year.
                   3128: .It
                   3129: Lines that are longer than
                   3130: .Em loglinelen
                   3131: characters (80 by default) are word-wrapped and continued on the
                   3132: next line with a four character indent.
                   3133: This makes entries easier to read for a human being, but makes it
                   3134: more difficult to use
                   3135: .Xr grep 1
                   3136: on the log files.
                   3137: If the
                   3138: .Em loglinelen
                   3139: option is set to 0 (or negated with a
                   3140: .Ql \&! ) ,
                   3141: word wrap will be disabled.
                   3142: .El
                   3143: .Sh SUDO.CONF
                   3144: The
                   3145: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudo.conf
                   3146: file determines which plugins the
                   3147: .Nm sudo
                   3148: front end will load.
                   3149: If no
                   3150: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudo.conf
                   3151: file
                   3152: is present, or it contains no
                   3153: .Li Plugin
                   3154: lines,
                   3155: .Nm sudo
                   3156: will use the
                   3157: .Em sudoers
                   3158: security policy and I/O logging, which corresponds to the following
                   3159: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudo.conf
                   3160: file.
                   3161: .Bd -literal
                   3162: #
                   3163: # Default @sysconfdir@/sudo.conf file
                   3164: #
                   3165: # Format:
                   3166: #   Plugin plugin_name plugin_path plugin_options ...
                   3167: #   Path askpass /path/to/askpass
                   3168: #   Path noexec /path/to/sudo_noexec.so
                   3169: #   Debug sudo /var/log/sudo_debug all@warn
                   3170: #   Set disable_coredump true
                   3171: #
                   3172: # The plugin_path is relative to @prefix@/libexec unless
                   3173: #   fully qualified.
                   3174: # The plugin_name corresponds to a global symbol in the plugin
                   3175: #   that contains the plugin interface structure.
                   3176: # The plugin_options are optional.
                   3177: #
                   3178: Plugin policy_plugin sudoers.so
                   3179: Plugin io_plugin sudoers.so
                   3180: .Ed
                   3181: .Ss Plugin options
                   3182: Starting with
                   3183: .Nm sudo
                   3184: 1.8.5, it is possible to pass options to the
                   3185: .Em sudoers
                   3186: plugin.
                   3187: Options may be listed after the path to the plugin (i.e.\& after
                   3188: .Pa sudoers.so ) ;
                   3189: multiple options should be space-separated.
                   3190: For example:
                   3191: .Bd -literal
                   3192: Plugin sudoers_policy sudoers.so sudoers_file=/etc/sudoers sudoers_uid=0 sudoers_gid=0 sudoers_mode=0440
                   3193: .Ed
                   3194: .Pp
                   3195: The following plugin options are supported:
                   3196: .Bl -tag -width 8n
                   3197: .It sudoers_file=pathname
                   3198: The
                   3199: .Em sudoers_file
                   3200: option can be used to override the default path
                   3201: to the
                   3202: .Em sudoers
                   3203: file.
                   3204: .It sudoers_uid=uid
                   3205: The
                   3206: .Em sudoers_uid
                   3207: option can be used to override the default owner of the sudoers file.
                   3208: It should be specified as a numeric user ID.
                   3209: .It sudoers_gid=gid
                   3210: The
                   3211: .Em sudoers_gid
                   3212: option can be used to override the default group of the sudoers file.
                   3213: It should be specified as a numeric group ID.
                   3214: .It sudoers_mode=mode
                   3215: The
                   3216: .Em sudoers_mode
                   3217: option can be used to override the default file mode for the sudoers file.
                   3218: It should be specified as an octal value.
                   3219: .El
                   3220: .Ss Debug flags
                   3221: Versions 1.8.4 and higher of the
                   3222: .Em sudoers
                   3223: plugin supports a debugging framework that can help track down what the
                   3224: plugin is doing internally if there is a problem.
                   3225: This can be configured in the
                   3226: .Pa @sysconfdir@/sudo.conf
                   3227: file as described in
                   3228: .Xr sudo @mansectsu@ .
                   3229: .Pp
                   3230: The
                   3231: .Em sudoers
                   3232: plugin uses the same debug flag format as the
                   3233: .Nm sudo
                   3234: front-end:
                   3235: .Em subsystem Ns No @ Ns Em priority .
                   3236: .Pp
                   3237: The priorities used by
                   3238: .Em sudoers ,
                   3239: in order of decreasing severity,
                   3240: are:
                   3241: .Em crit ,
                   3242: .Em err ,
                   3243: .Em warn ,
                   3244: .Em notice ,
                   3245: .Em diag ,
                   3246: .Em info ,
                   3247: .Em trace
                   3248: and
                   3249: .Em debug .
                   3250: Each priority, when specified, also includes all priorities higher than it.
                   3251: For example, a priority of
                   3252: .Em notice
                   3253: would include debug messages logged at
                   3254: .Em notice
                   3255: and higher.
                   3256: .Pp
                   3257: The following subsystems are used by
                   3258: .Em sudoers :
                   3259: .Bl -tag -width 8n
                   3260: .It Em alias
                   3261: .Li User_Alias ,
                   3262: .Li Runas_Alias ,
                   3263: .Li Host_Alias
                   3264: and
                   3265: .Li Cmnd_Alias
                   3266: processing
                   3267: .It Em all
                   3268: matches every subsystem
                   3269: .It Em audit
                   3270: BSM and Linux audit code
                   3271: .It Em auth
                   3272: user authentication
                   3273: .It Em defaults
                   3274: .Em sudoers
                   3275: .Em Defaults
                   3276: settings
                   3277: .It Em env
                   3278: environment handling
                   3279: .It Em ldap
                   3280: LDAP-based sudoers
                   3281: .It Em logging
                   3282: logging support
                   3283: .It Em match
                   3284: matching of users, groups, hosts and netgroups in
                   3285: .Em sudoers
                   3286: .It Em netif
                   3287: network interface handling
                   3288: .It Em nss
                   3289: network service switch handling in
                   3290: .Em sudoers
                   3291: .It Em parser
                   3292: .Em sudoers
                   3293: file parsing
                   3294: .It Em perms
                   3295: permission setting
                   3296: .It Em plugin
                   3297: The equivalent of
                   3298: .Em main
                   3299: for the plugin.
                   3300: .It Em pty
                   3301: pseudo-tty related code
                   3302: .It Em rbtree
                   3303: redblack tree internals
                   3304: .It Em util
                   3305: utility functions
                   3306: .El
                   3307: .Sh FILES
                   3308: .Bl -tag -width 24n
                   3309: .It Pa @sysconfdir@/sudo.conf
                   3310: Sudo front end configuration
                   3311: .It Pa @sysconfdir@/sudoers
                   3312: List of who can run what
                   3313: .It Pa /etc/group
                   3314: Local groups file
                   3315: .It Pa /etc/netgroup
                   3316: List of network groups
                   3317: .It Pa @iolog_dir@
                   3318: I/O log files
                   3319: .It Pa @timedir@
                   3320: Directory containing time stamps for the
                   3321: .Em sudoers
                   3322: security policy
                   3323: .It Pa /etc/environment
                   3324: Initial environment for
                   3325: .Fl i
                   3326: mode on AIX and Linux systems
                   3327: .El
                   3328: .Sh EXAMPLES
                   3329: Below are example
                   3330: .Em sudoers
                   3331: entries.
                   3332: Admittedly, some of these are a bit contrived.
                   3333: First, we allow a few environment variables to pass and then define our
                   3334: .Em aliases :
                   3335: .Bd -literal
                   3336: # Run X applications through sudo; HOME is used to find the
                   3337: # .Xauthority file.  Note that other programs use HOME to find
                   3338: # configuration files and this may lead to privilege escalation!
                   3339: Defaults env_keep += "DISPLAY HOME"
                   3340: 
                   3341: # User alias specification
                   3342: User_Alias     FULLTIMERS = millert, mikef, dowdy
                   3343: User_Alias     PARTTIMERS = bostley, jwfox, crawl
                   3344: User_Alias     WEBMASTERS = will, wendy, wim
                   3345: 
                   3346: # Runas alias specification
                   3347: Runas_Alias    OP = root, operator
                   3348: Runas_Alias    DB = oracle, sybase
                   3349: Runas_Alias    ADMINGRP = adm, oper
                   3350: 
                   3351: # Host alias specification
                   3352: Host_Alias     SPARC = bigtime, eclipse, moet, anchor :\e
                   3353:                SGI = grolsch, dandelion, black :\e
                   3354:                ALPHA = widget, thalamus, foobar :\e
                   3355:                HPPA = boa, nag, python
                   3356: Host_Alias     CUNETS = 128.138.0.0/255.255.0.0
                   3357: Host_Alias     CSNETS = 128.138.243.0, 128.138.204.0/24, 128.138.242.0
                   3358: Host_Alias     SERVERS = master, mail, www, ns
                   3359: Host_Alias     CDROM = orion, perseus, hercules
                   3360: 
                   3361: # Cmnd alias specification
                   3362: Cmnd_Alias     DUMPS = /usr/bin/mt, /usr/sbin/dump, /usr/sbin/rdump,\e
                   3363:                        /usr/sbin/restore, /usr/sbin/rrestore
                   3364: Cmnd_Alias     KILL = /usr/bin/kill
                   3365: Cmnd_Alias     PRINTING = /usr/sbin/lpc, /usr/bin/lprm
                   3366: Cmnd_Alias     SHUTDOWN = /usr/sbin/shutdown
                   3367: Cmnd_Alias     HALT = /usr/sbin/halt
                   3368: Cmnd_Alias     REBOOT = /usr/sbin/reboot
                   3369: Cmnd_Alias     SHELLS = /usr/bin/sh, /usr/bin/csh, /usr/bin/ksh,\e
                   3370:                         /usr/local/bin/tcsh, /usr/bin/rsh,\e
                   3371:                         /usr/local/bin/zsh
                   3372: Cmnd_Alias     SU = /usr/bin/su
                   3373: Cmnd_Alias     PAGERS = /usr/bin/more, /usr/bin/pg, /usr/bin/less
                   3374: .Ed
                   3375: .Pp
                   3376: Here we override some of the compiled in default values.
                   3377: We want
                   3378: .Nm sudo
                   3379: to log via
                   3380: .Xr syslog 3
                   3381: using the
                   3382: .Em auth
                   3383: facility in all cases.
                   3384: We don't want to subject the full time staff to the
                   3385: .Nm sudo
                   3386: lecture, user
                   3387: .Sy millert
                   3388: need not give a password, and we don't want to reset the
                   3389: .Ev LOGNAME ,
                   3390: .Ev USER
                   3391: or
                   3392: .Ev USERNAME
                   3393: environment variables when running commands as root.
                   3394: Additionally, on the machines in the
                   3395: .Em SERVERS
                   3396: .Li Host_Alias ,
                   3397: we keep an additional local log file and make sure we log the year
                   3398: in each log line since the log entries will be kept around for several years.
                   3399: Lastly, we disable shell escapes for the commands in the PAGERS
                   3400: .Li Cmnd_Alias
                   3401: .Po
                   3402: .Pa /usr/bin/more ,
                   3403: .Pa /usr/bin/pg
                   3404: and
                   3405: .Pa /usr/bin/less
                   3406: .Pc .
                   3407: .Bd -literal
                   3408: # Override built-in defaults
                   3409: Defaults               syslog=auth
                   3410: Defaults>root          !set_logname
                   3411: Defaults:FULLTIMERS    !lecture
                   3412: Defaults:millert       !authenticate
                   3413: Defaults@SERVERS       log_year, logfile=/var/log/sudo.log
                   3414: Defaults!PAGERS                noexec
                   3415: .Ed
                   3416: .Pp
                   3417: The
                   3418: .Em User specification
                   3419: is the part that actually determines who may run what.
                   3420: .Bd -literal
                   3421: root           ALL = (ALL) ALL
                   3422: %wheel         ALL = (ALL) ALL
                   3423: .Ed
                   3424: .Pp
                   3425: We let
                   3426: .Sy root
                   3427: and any user in group
                   3428: .Sy wheel
                   3429: run any command on any host as any user.
                   3430: .Bd -literal
                   3431: FULLTIMERS     ALL = NOPASSWD: ALL
                   3432: .Ed
                   3433: .Pp
                   3434: Full time sysadmins
                   3435: .Po
                   3436: .Sy millert ,
                   3437: .Sy mikef ,
                   3438: and
                   3439: .Sy dowdy
                   3440: .Pc
                   3441: may run any command on any host without authenticating themselves.
                   3442: .Bd -literal
                   3443: PARTTIMERS     ALL = ALL
                   3444: .Ed
                   3445: .Pp
                   3446: Part time sysadmins
                   3447: .Sy bostley ,
                   3448: .Sy jwfox ,
                   3449: and
                   3450: .Sy crawl )
                   3451: may run any command on any host but they must authenticate themselves
                   3452: first (since the entry lacks the
                   3453: .Li NOPASSWD
                   3454: tag).
                   3455: .Bd -literal
                   3456: jack           CSNETS = ALL
                   3457: .Ed
                   3458: .Pp
                   3459: The user
                   3460: .Sy jack
                   3461: may run any command on the machines in the
                   3462: .Em CSNETS
                   3463: alias (the networks
                   3464: .Li 128.138.243.0 ,
                   3465: .Li 128.138.204.0 ,
                   3466: and
                   3467: .Li 128.138.242.0 ) .
                   3468: Of those networks, only
                   3469: .Li 128.138.204.0
                   3470: has an explicit netmask (in CIDR notation) indicating it is a class C network.
                   3471: For the other networks in
                   3472: .Em CSNETS ,
                   3473: the local machine's netmask will be used during matching.
                   3474: .Bd -literal
                   3475: lisa           CUNETS = ALL
                   3476: .Ed
                   3477: .Pp
                   3478: The user
                   3479: .Sy lisa
                   3480: may run any command on any host in the
                   3481: .Em CUNETS
                   3482: alias (the class B network
                   3483: .Li 128.138.0.0 ) .
                   3484: .Bd -literal
                   3485: operator       ALL = DUMPS, KILL, SHUTDOWN, HALT, REBOOT, PRINTING,\e
                   3486:                sudoedit /etc/printcap, /usr/oper/bin/
                   3487: .Ed
                   3488: .Pp
                   3489: The
                   3490: .Sy operator
                   3491: user may run commands limited to simple maintenance.
                   3492: Here, those are commands related to backups, killing processes, the
                   3493: printing system, shutting down the system, and any commands in the
                   3494: directory
                   3495: .Pa /usr/oper/bin/ .
                   3496: .Bd -literal
                   3497: joe            ALL = /usr/bin/su operator
                   3498: .Ed
                   3499: .Pp
                   3500: The user
                   3501: .Sy joe
                   3502: may only
                   3503: .Xr su 1
                   3504: to operator.
                   3505: .Bd -literal
                   3506: pete           HPPA = /usr/bin/passwd [A-Za-z]*, !/usr/bin/passwd root
                   3507: 
                   3508: %opers         ALL = (: ADMINGRP) /usr/sbin/
                   3509: .Ed
                   3510: .Pp
                   3511: Users in the
                   3512: .Sy opers
                   3513: group may run commands in
                   3514: .Pa /usr/sbin/
                   3515: as themselves
                   3516: with any group in the
                   3517: .Em ADMINGRP
                   3518: .Li Runas_Alias
                   3519: (the
                   3520: .Sy adm
                   3521: and
                   3522: .Sy oper
                   3523: groups).
                   3524: .Pp
                   3525: The user
                   3526: .Sy pete
                   3527: is allowed to change anyone's password except for
                   3528: root on the
                   3529: .Em HPPA
                   3530: machines.
                   3531: Note that this assumes
                   3532: .Xr passwd 1
                   3533: does not take multiple user names on the command line.
                   3534: .Bd -literal
                   3535: bob            SPARC = (OP) ALL : SGI = (OP) ALL
                   3536: .Ed
                   3537: .Pp
                   3538: The user
                   3539: .Sy bob
                   3540: may run anything on the
                   3541: .Em SPARC
                   3542: and
                   3543: .Em SGI
                   3544: machines as any user listed in the
                   3545: .Em OP
                   3546: .Li Runas_Alias
                   3547: .Po
                   3548: .Sy root
                   3549: and
                   3550: .Sy operator .
                   3551: .Pc
                   3552: .Bd -literal
                   3553: jim            +biglab = ALL
                   3554: .Ed
                   3555: .Pp
                   3556: The user
                   3557: .Sy jim
                   3558: may run any command on machines in the
                   3559: .Em biglab
                   3560: netgroup.
                   3561: .Nm sudo
                   3562: knows that
                   3563: .Dq biglab
                   3564: is a netgroup due to the
                   3565: .Ql +
                   3566: prefix.
                   3567: .Bd -literal
                   3568: +secretaries   ALL = PRINTING, /usr/bin/adduser, /usr/bin/rmuser
                   3569: .Ed
                   3570: .Pp
                   3571: Users in the
                   3572: .Sy secretaries
                   3573: netgroup need to help manage the printers as well as add and remove users,
                   3574: so they are allowed to run those commands on all machines.
                   3575: .Bd -literal
                   3576: fred           ALL = (DB) NOPASSWD: ALL
                   3577: .Ed
                   3578: .Pp
                   3579: The user
                   3580: .Sy fred
                   3581: can run commands as any user in the
                   3582: .Em DB
                   3583: .Li Runas_Alias
                   3584: .Po
                   3585: .Sy oracle
                   3586: or
                   3587: .Sy sybase
                   3588: .Pc
                   3589: without giving a password.
                   3590: .Bd -literal
                   3591: john           ALPHA = /usr/bin/su [!-]*, !/usr/bin/su *root*
                   3592: .Ed
                   3593: .Pp
                   3594: On the
                   3595: .Em ALPHA
                   3596: machines, user
                   3597: .Sy john
                   3598: may su to anyone except root but he is not allowed to specify any options
                   3599: to the
                   3600: .Xr su 1
                   3601: command.
                   3602: .Bd -literal
                   3603: jen            ALL, !SERVERS = ALL
                   3604: .Ed
                   3605: .Pp
                   3606: The user
                   3607: .Sy jen
                   3608: may run any command on any machine except for those in the
                   3609: .Em SERVERS
                   3610: .Li Host_Alias
                   3611: (master, mail, www and ns).
                   3612: .Bd -literal
                   3613: jill           SERVERS = /usr/bin/, !SU, !SHELLS
                   3614: .Ed
                   3615: .Pp
                   3616: For any machine in the
                   3617: .Em SERVERS
                   3618: .Li Host_Alias ,
                   3619: .Sy jill
                   3620: may run
                   3621: any commands in the directory
                   3622: .Pa /usr/bin/
                   3623: except for those commands
                   3624: belonging to the
                   3625: .Em SU
                   3626: and
                   3627: .Em SHELLS
                   3628: .Li Cmnd_Aliases .
                   3629: .Bd -literal
                   3630: steve          CSNETS = (operator) /usr/local/op_commands/
                   3631: .Ed
                   3632: .Pp
                   3633: The user
                   3634: .Sy steve
                   3635: may run any command in the directory /usr/local/op_commands/
                   3636: but only as user operator.
                   3637: .Bd -literal
                   3638: matt           valkyrie = KILL
                   3639: .Ed
                   3640: .Pp
                   3641: On his personal workstation, valkyrie,
                   3642: .Sy matt
                   3643: needs to be able to kill hung processes.
                   3644: .Bd -literal
                   3645: WEBMASTERS     www = (www) ALL, (root) /usr/bin/su www
                   3646: .Ed
                   3647: .Pp
                   3648: On the host www, any user in the
                   3649: .Em WEBMASTERS
                   3650: .Li User_Alias
                   3651: (will, wendy, and wim), may run any command as user www (which owns the
                   3652: web pages) or simply
                   3653: .Xr su 1
                   3654: to www.
                   3655: .Bd -literal
                   3656: ALL            CDROM = NOPASSWD: /sbin/umount /CDROM,\e
                   3657:                /sbin/mount -o nosuid\,nodev /dev/cd0a /CDROM
                   3658: .Ed
                   3659: .Pp
                   3660: Any user may mount or unmount a CD-ROM on the machines in the CDROM
                   3661: .Li Host_Alias
                   3662: (orion, perseus, hercules) without entering a password.
                   3663: This is a bit tedious for users to type, so it is a prime candidate
                   3664: for encapsulating in a shell script.
                   3665: .Sh SECURITY NOTES
                   3666: .Ss Limitations of the So !\& Sc operator
                   3667: It is generally not effective to
                   3668: .Dq subtract
                   3669: commands from
                   3670: .Sy ALL
                   3671: using the
                   3672: .Ql !\&
                   3673: operator.
                   3674: A user can trivially circumvent this by copying the desired command
                   3675: to a different name and then executing that.
                   3676: For example:
                   3677: .Bd -literal
                   3678: bill   ALL = ALL, !SU, !SHELLS
                   3679: .Ed
                   3680: .Pp
                   3681: Doesn't really prevent
                   3682: .Sy bill
                   3683: from running the commands listed in
                   3684: .Em SU
                   3685: or
                   3686: .Em SHELLS
                   3687: since he can simply copy those commands to a different name, or use
                   3688: a shell escape from an editor or other program.
                   3689: Therefore, these kind of restrictions should be considered
                   3690: advisory at best (and reinforced by policy).
                   3691: .Pp
                   3692: In general, if a user has sudo
                   3693: .Sy ALL
                   3694: there is nothing to prevent them from creating their own program that gives
                   3695: them a root shell (or making their own copy of a shell) regardless of any
                   3696: .Ql !\&
                   3697: elements in the user specification.
                   3698: .Ss Security implications of Em fast_glob
                   3699: If the
                   3700: .Em fast_glob
                   3701: option is in use, it is not possible to reliably negate commands where the
                   3702: path name includes globbing (aka wildcard) characters.
                   3703: This is because the C library's
                   3704: .Xr fnmatch 3
                   3705: function cannot resolve relative paths.
                   3706: While this is typically only an inconvenience for rules that grant privileges,
                   3707: it can result in a security issue for rules that subtract or revoke privileges.
                   3708: .Pp
                   3709: For example, given the following
                   3710: .Em sudoers
                   3711: entry:
                   3712: .Bd -literal
                   3713: john   ALL = /usr/bin/passwd [a-zA-Z0-9]*, /usr/bin/chsh [a-zA-Z0-9]*,\e
                   3714:               /usr/bin/chfn [a-zA-Z0-9]*, !/usr/bin/* root
                   3715: .Ed
                   3716: .Pp
                   3717: User
                   3718: .Sy john
                   3719: can still run
                   3720: .Li /usr/bin/passwd root
                   3721: if
                   3722: .Em fast_glob
                   3723: is enabled by changing to
                   3724: .Pa /usr/bin
                   3725: and running
                   3726: .Li ./passwd root
                   3727: instead.
                   3728: .Ss Preventing shell escapes
                   3729: Once
                   3730: .Nm sudo
                   3731: executes a program, that program is free to do whatever
                   3732: it pleases, including run other programs.
                   3733: This can be a security issue since it is not uncommon for a program to
                   3734: allow shell escapes, which lets a user bypass
                   3735: .Nm sudo Ns No 's
                   3736: access control and logging.
                   3737: Common programs that permit shell escapes include shells (obviously),
                   3738: editors, paginators, mail and terminal programs.
                   3739: .Pp
                   3740: There are two basic approaches to this problem:
                   3741: .Bl -tag -width 8n
                   3742: .It restrict
                   3743: Avoid giving users access to commands that allow the user to run
                   3744: arbitrary commands.
                   3745: Many editors have a restricted mode where shell
                   3746: escapes are disabled, though
                   3747: .Nm sudoedit
                   3748: is a better solution to
                   3749: running editors via
                   3750: .Nm sudo .
                   3751: Due to the large number of programs that
                   3752: offer shell escapes, restricting users to the set of programs that
                   3753: do not is often unworkable.
                   3754: .It noexec
                   3755: Many systems that support shared libraries have the ability to
                   3756: override default library functions by pointing an environment
                   3757: variable (usually
                   3758: .Ev LD_PRELOAD )
                   3759: to an alternate shared library.
                   3760: On such systems,
                   3761: .Nm sudo Ns No 's
                   3762: .Em noexec
                   3763: functionality can be used to prevent a program run by
                   3764: .Nm sudo
                   3765: from executing any other programs.
                   3766: Note, however, that this applies only to native dynamically-linked
                   3767: executables.
                   3768: Statically-linked executables and foreign executables
                   3769: running under binary emulation are not affected.
                   3770: .Pp
                   3771: The
                   3772: .Em noexec
                   3773: feature is known to work on SunOS, Solaris, *BSD,
                   3774: Linux, IRIX, Tru64 UNIX, MacOS X, HP-UX 11.x and AIX 5.3 and above.
                   3775: It should be supported on most operating systems that support the
                   3776: .Ev LD_PRELOAD
                   3777: environment variable.
                   3778: Check your operating system's manual pages for the dynamic linker
                   3779: (usually ld.so, ld.so.1, dyld, dld.sl, rld, or loader) to see if
                   3780: .Ev LD_PRELOAD
                   3781: is supported.
                   3782: .Pp
                   3783: On Solaris 10 and higher,
                   3784: .Em noexec
                   3785: uses Solaris privileges instead of the
                   3786: .Ev LD_PRELOAD
                   3787: environment variable.
                   3788: .Pp
                   3789: To enable
                   3790: .Em noexec
                   3791: for a command, use the
                   3792: .Li NOEXEC
                   3793: tag as documented
                   3794: in the User Specification section above.
                   3795: Here is that example again:
                   3796: .Bd -literal
                   3797: aaron  shanty = NOEXEC: /usr/bin/more, /usr/bin/vi
                   3798: .Ed
                   3799: .Pp
                   3800: This allows user
                   3801: .Sy aaron
                   3802: to run
                   3803: .Pa /usr/bin/more
                   3804: and
                   3805: .Pa /usr/bin/vi
                   3806: with
                   3807: .Em noexec
                   3808: enabled.
                   3809: This will prevent those two commands from
                   3810: executing other commands (such as a shell).
                   3811: If you are unsure whether or not your system is capable of supporting
                   3812: .Em noexec
                   3813: you can always just try it out and check whether shell escapes work when
                   3814: .Em noexec
                   3815: is enabled.
                   3816: .El
                   3817: .Pp
                   3818: Note that restricting shell escapes is not a panacea.
                   3819: Programs running as root are still capable of many potentially hazardous
                   3820: operations (such as changing or overwriting files) that could lead
                   3821: to unintended privilege escalation.
                   3822: In the specific case of an editor, a safer approach is to give the
                   3823: user permission to run
                   3824: .Nm sudoedit .
                   3825: .Ss Time stamp file checks
                   3826: .Em sudoers
                   3827: will check the ownership of its time stamp directory
                   3828: .Po
                   3829: .Pa @timedir@
                   3830: by default
                   3831: .Pc
                   3832: and ignore the directory's contents if it is not owned by root or
                   3833: if it is writable by a user other than root.
                   3834: On systems that allow non-root users to give away files via
                   3835: .Xr chown 2 ,
                   3836: if the time stamp directory is located in a world-writable
                   3837: directory (e.g.\&,
                   3838: .Pa /tmp ) ,
                   3839: it is possible for a user to create the time stamp directory before
                   3840: .Nm sudo
                   3841: is run.
                   3842: However, because
                   3843: .Em sudoers
                   3844: checks the ownership and mode of the directory and its
                   3845: contents, the only damage that can be done is to
                   3846: .Dq hide
                   3847: files by putting them in the time stamp dir.
                   3848: This is unlikely to happen since once the time stamp dir is owned by root
                   3849: and inaccessible by any other user, the user placing files there would be
                   3850: unable to get them back out.
                   3851: .Pp
                   3852: .Em sudoers
                   3853: will not honor time stamps set far in the future.
                   3854: Time stamps with a date greater than current_time + 2 *
                   3855: .Li TIMEOUT
                   3856: will be ignored and sudo will log and complain.
                   3857: This is done to keep a user from creating his/her own time stamp with a
                   3858: bogus date on systems that allow users to give away files if the time
                   3859: stamp directory is located in a world-writable directory.
                   3860: .Pp
                   3861: On systems where the boot time is available,
                   3862: .Em sudoers
                   3863: will ignore time stamps that date from before the machine booted.
                   3864: .Pp
                   3865: Since time stamp files live in the file system, they can outlive a
                   3866: user's login session.
                   3867: As a result, a user may be able to login, run a command with
                   3868: .Nm sudo
                   3869: after authenticating, logout, login again, and run
                   3870: .Nm sudo
                   3871: without authenticating so long as the time stamp file's modification
                   3872: time is within
                   3873: .Li @timeout@
                   3874: minutes (or whatever the timeout is set to in
                   3875: .Em sudoers ) .
                   3876: When the
                   3877: .Em tty_tickets
                   3878: option is enabled, the time stamp has per-tty granularity but still
                   3879: may outlive the user's session.
                   3880: On Linux systems where the devpts filesystem is used, Solaris systems
                   3881: with the devices filesystem, as well as other systems that utilize a
                   3882: devfs filesystem that monotonically increase the inode number of devices
                   3883: as they are created (such as Mac OS X),
                   3884: .Em sudoers
                   3885: is able to determine when a tty-based time stamp file is stale and will
                   3886: ignore it.
                   3887: Administrators should not rely on this feature as it is not universally
                   3888: available.
                   3889: .Sh SEE ALSO
                   3890: .Xr ssh 1 ,
                   3891: .Xr su 1 ,
                   3892: .Xr fnmatch 3 ,
                   3893: .Xr glob 3 ,
                   3894: .Xr mktemp 3 ,
                   3895: .Xr strftime 3 ,
                   3896: .Xr sudoers.ldap @mansectform@ ,
                   3897: .Xr sudo_plugin @mansectsu@ ,
                   3898: .Xr sudo @mansectsu@ ,
                   3899: .Xr visudo @mansectsu@
                   3900: .Sh CAVEATS
                   3901: The
                   3902: .Em sudoers
                   3903: file should
                   3904: .Sy always
                   3905: be edited by the
                   3906: .Nm visudo
                   3907: command which locks the file and does grammatical checking.
                   3908: It is
                   3909: imperative that
                   3910: .Em sudoers
                   3911: be free of syntax errors since
                   3912: .Nm sudo
                   3913: will not run with a syntactically incorrect
                   3914: .Em sudoers
                   3915: file.
                   3916: .Pp
                   3917: When using netgroups of machines (as opposed to users), if you
                   3918: store fully qualified host name in the netgroup (as is usually the
                   3919: case), you either need to have the machine's host name be fully qualified
                   3920: as returned by the
                   3921: .Li hostname
                   3922: command or use the
                   3923: .Em fqdn
                   3924: option in
                   3925: .Em sudoers .
                   3926: .Sh BUGS
                   3927: If you feel you have found a bug in
                   3928: .Nm sudo ,
                   3929: please submit a bug report at http://www.sudo.ws/sudo/bugs/
                   3930: .Sh SUPPORT
                   3931: Limited free support is available via the sudo-users mailing list,
                   3932: see http://www.sudo.ws/mailman/listinfo/sudo-users to subscribe or
                   3933: search the archives.
                   3934: .Sh DISCLAIMER
                   3935: .Nm sudo
                   3936: is provided
                   3937: .Dq AS IS
                   3938: and any express or implied warranties, including, but not limited
                   3939: to, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a
                   3940: particular purpose are disclaimed.
                   3941: See the LICENSE file distributed with
                   3942: .Nm sudo
                   3943: or http://www.sudo.ws/sudo/license.html for complete details.

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