144 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
144 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
Notes on upgrading from an older release
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========================================
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o Upgrading from a version prior to 1.7.0:
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Starting with sudo 1.7.0 comments in the sudoers file must not
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have a digit or minus sign immediately after the comment character
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('#'). Otherwise, the comment may be interpreted as a user or
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group ID.
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When sudo is build with LDAP support the /etc/nsswitch.conf file is
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now used to determine the sudoers seach order. sudo will default to
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only using /etc/sudoers unless /etc/nsswitch.conf says otherwise.
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This can be changed with an nsswitch.conf line, e.g.:
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sudoers: ldap files
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Would case LDAP to be searched first, then the sudoers file.
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To restore the pre-1.7.0 behavior, run configure with the
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--with-nsswitch=no flag.
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Sudo now ignores user .ldaprc files as well as system LDAP defaults.
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All LDAP configuration is now in /etc/ldap.conf (or whichever file
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was specified by configure's --with-ldap-conf-file option).
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If you are using TLS, you may now need to specify:
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tls_checkpeer no
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in sudo's ldap.conf unless ldap.conf references a valid certificate
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authority file(s).
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Please also see the WHATSNEW file for a list of new features in
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sudo 1.7.0.
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o Upgrading from a version prior to 1.6.9:
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Starting with sudo 1.6.9, if an OS supports a modular authentication
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method such as PAM, it will be used by default by configure.
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Environment variable handling has changed significantly in sudo
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1.6.9. Prior to version 1.6.9, sudo would preserve the user's
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environment, pruning out potentially dangerous variables.
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Beginning with sudo 1.6.9, the envionment is reset to a default
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set of values with only a small number of "safe" variables
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preserved. To preserve specific environment variables, add
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them to the "env_keep" list in sudoers. E.g.
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Defaults env_keep += "EDITOR"
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The old behavior can be restored by negating the "env_reset"
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option in sudoers. E.g.
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Defaults !env_reset
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There have also been changes to how the "env_keep" and
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"env_check" options behave.
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Prior to sudo 1.6.9, the TERM and PATH environment variables
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would always be preserved even if the env_keep option was
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redefined. That is no longer the case. Consequently, if
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env_keep is set with "=" and not simply appended to (i.e. using
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"+="), PATH and TERM must be explicitly included in the list
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of environment variables to keep. The LOGNAME, SHELL, USER,
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and USERNAME environment variables are still always set.
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Additionally, the env_check setting previously had no effect
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when env_reset was set (which is now on by default). Starting
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with sudo 1.6.9, environment variables listed in env_check are
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also preserved in the env_reset case, provided that they do not
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contain a '/' or '%' character. Note that it is not necessary
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to also list a variable in env_keep--having it in env_check is
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sufficent.
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The default lists of variables to be preserved and/or checked
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are displayed when sudo is run by root with the -V flag.
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o Upgrading from a version prior to 1.6.8:
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Prior to sudo 1.6.8, if /var/run did not exist, sudo would put
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the timestamp files in /tmp/.odus. As of sudo 1.6.8, the
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timestamp files will be placed in /var/adm/sudo or /usr/adm/sudo
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if there is no /var/run directory. This directory will be
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created if it does not already exist.
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Previously, a sudoers entry that explicitly prohibited running
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a command as a certain user did not override a previous entry
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allowing the same command. This has been fixed in sudo 1.6.8
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such that the last match is now used (as it is documented).
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Hopefully no one was depending on the previous (buggy) beghavior.
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o Upgrading from a version prior to 1.6:
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As of sudo 1.6, parsing of runas entries and the NOPASSWD tag
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has changed. Prior to 1.6, a runas specifier applied only to
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a single command directly following it. Likewise, the NOPASSWD
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tag only allowed the command directly following it to be run
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without a password. Starting with sudo 1.6, both the runas
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specifier and the NOPASSWD tag are "sticky" for an entire
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command list. So, given the following line in sudo < 1.6
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millert ALL=(daemon) NOPASSWD:/usr/bin/whoami,/bin/ls
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millert would be able to run /usr/bin/whoami as user daemon
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without a password and /bin/ls as root with a password.
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As of sudo 1.6, the same line now means that millert is able
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to run run both /usr/bin/whoami and /bin/ls as user daemon
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without a password. To expand on this, take the following
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example:
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millert ALL=(daemon) NOPASSWD:/usr/bin/whoami, (root) /bin/ls, \
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/sbin/dump
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millert can run /usr/bin/whoami as daemon and /bin/ls and
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/sbin/dump as root. No password need be given for either
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command. In other words, the "(root)" sets the default runas
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user to root for the rest of the list. If we wanted to require
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a password for /bin/ls and /sbin/dump the line could be written
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thusly:
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millert ALL=(daemon) NOPASSWD:/usr/bin/whoami, \
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(root) PASSWD:/bin/ls, /sbin/dump
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Additionally, sudo now uses a per-user timestamp directory
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instead of a timestamp file. This allows tty timestamps to
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simply be files within the user's timestamp dir. For the
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default, non-tty case, the timestamp on the directory itself
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is used.
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Also, the temporary file used by visudo is now /etc/sudoers.tmp
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since some versions of vipw on systems with shadow passwords use
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/etc/stmp for the temporary shadow file.
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o Upgrading from a version prior to 1.5:
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By default, sudo expects the sudoers file to be mode 0440 and
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to be owned by user and group 0. This differs from version 1.4
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and below which expected the sudoers file to be mode 0400 and
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to be owned by root. Doing a `make install' will set the sudoers
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file to the new mode and group. If sudo encounters a sudoers
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file with the old permissions it will attempt to update it to
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the new scheme. You cannot, however, use a sudoers file with
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the new permissions with an old sudo binary. It is suggested
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that if have a means of distributing sudo you distribute the
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new binaries first, then the new sudoers file (or you can leave
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sudoers as is and sudo will fix the permissions itself as long
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as sudoers is on a local file system).
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