this post was submitted on 06 Jun 2024
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So, you mean that you want specific users who don't have "sudo" in their list of supplemental groups in /etc/group to also be able to invoke specific commands with
sudo
, but not arbitrary ones? Sure, you can do that.The line in /etc/sudoers in Debian that lets members of group "sudo" run arbitrary commands with "sudo" is this:
But you can have individual users in there too. Here's an example of setting a specific user to being able to run the
whoami
command andapt
command as root, without requiring a password to do so:https://www.baeldung.com/linux/sudo-privileges-user
If you're gonna modify /etc/sudoers, though, use
visudo
to do so:Well my other comement saying this is exactly what i need did not get posted as a reply to your comment, my mistake. I followed rhe example for "/usr/bin/wg/" intending to be able to use
but it still requires sudo. I tried rebooting and nothing changed, any ideas? I did
to get the command location for the sudoer file.
What the line I listed will do will let a specific user have permission to use sudo without a password to run
wg
as root without a password. So they (and not other users) can type:And the command will run as the root user, without them being prompted to enter a password.
It doesn't mean that when that user runs:
In their shell, what will actually run is:
If you also want to avoid typing the extra characters, you can set up an alias in your shell.
I don't know what shell you're using, but most Linux systems use
bash
as a default:If you're using bash, you can tell your current bash shell invocation to do that with the
alias
command:If you want that command run in every bash shell you invoke, you can do so by editing
~/.bashrc
and adding the line:Awesome now I understand what you and the other commenter were talking about with aliasing. Well this works perfect without the alias, many thanks