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sudo: Allows restricted root access for specified users.
- Summary
- Sudo (superuser do) allows a system administrator to give certain
users (or groups of users) the ability to run some (or all) commands
as root while logging all commands and arguments. Sudo operates on a
per-command basis. It is not a replacement for the shell. Features
include: the ability to restrict what commands a user may run on a
per-host basis, copious logging of each command (providing a clear
audit trail of who did what), a configurable timeout of the sudo
command, and the ability to use the same configuration file (sudoers)
on many different machines.
Changelog
- * Mon Jan 26 18:00:00 2009 Daniel Kopecek <dkopecek{%}redhat{*}com> 1.6.7p5-30.1.5
- fix #465906 - Exclude kerberos environement from being removed from sudo
Resolves: #465906
- * Fri Dec 16 18:00:00 2005 Karel Zak <kzak{%}redhat{*}com> 1.6.7p5-30.1.4
- fix #175295 - SECURITY: CRM 764618: RHEL 4 - Perl scripts run via Sudo can be subverted
- * Thu Jul 21 19:00:00 2005 Karel Zak <kzak{%}redhat{*}com> 1.6.7p5-30.1.3
- fix #154511 - sudo does not use limits.conf
- fix #144893 - sudo-1.6.7p5-1 does not work with pam_tally correctly
- fix #163044 - sudo logging truncates username to 8 characters
- fix debuginfo