On 11/18/2009 05:21 PM, Peter Jones wrote:
> 
> You've sortof missed my point here, which isn't a big surprise since I
> left a lot of space to figure it out in.
> 
> root added your name to /etc/sudoers.  She might have put:
> 
> cjd ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL
> 
> but apparently instead she put:
> 
> cjd ALL=(ALL) ALL
> 
> If sudo is asking you for a password, it's because somebody intentionally
> made a choice for it to do so, in the config file. It's not some kind of
> accident. It's not some global policy because of a universal truth, as you
> seem to think. It's a choice somebody made when they put your name in
> there.
> 
> (Read what you will as to how this is relevant to our current predicament.)
> 

Ok, lets put it another way:

Why is it a good idea? We could say:

1) It isn't. The sudo authors added no value by giving admins this option, and 
wasted everyone's time by making it the preferred behavior (you have to 
explicitly /say/ NOPASSWD if you want it. That's a very different message than 
having to explicitly say PASSWD. Ultimately the UI here encourages leaving the 
password prompt enabled when doling out permissions).

2) All the information granted to the process about the context in which it was 
run is insufficient to verify something that prompting for the password 
verifies.

And yes, sudo does also try to make sure its running on an actual console (try 
piping a password to it sometime).

--CJD

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