NAME

sudo_root - How to run administrative commands

SYNOPSIS

sudo command

sudo -i

INTRODUCTION

By default, the password for the user "root" (the system administrator) is locked. This means you cannot login as root or use su. Instead, the installer will set up sudo to allow the user that is created during install to run all administrative commands.

This means that in the terminal you can use sudo for commands that require root privileges. All programs in the menu will use a graphical sudo to prompt for a password. When sudo asks for a password, it needs your password, this means that a root password is not needed.

To run a command which requires root privileges in a terminal, simply prepend sudo in front of it. To get an interactive root shell, use sudo -i.

ALLOWING OTHER USERS TO RUN SUDO

By default, only the user who installed the system is permitted to run sudo. To add more administrators, i. e. users who can run sudo, you have to add these users to the group 'sudo' by doing one of the following steps:

BENEFITS OF USING SUDO

The benefits of leaving root disabled by default include the following:

DOWNSIDES OF USING SUDO

Although for desktops the benefits of using sudo are great, there are possible issues which need to be noted:

will not work since it is the shell that tries to write to that file. You can use

ls | sudo tee /root/somefile

to get the behaviour you want.

GOING BACK TO A TRADITIONAL ROOT ACCOUNT

This is not recommended!

To enable the root account (i.e. set a password) use:

sudo passwd root

Afterwards, edit the sudo configuration with sudo visudo and comment out the line

%sudo ALL=(ALL) ALL

to disable sudo access to members of the sudo group.

SEE ALSO

sudo(8), https://wiki.ubuntu.com/RootSudo