And while you're at it, you might as well supply the full path to su. Quite a while ago I was taught to give the full path to su. This instruction was given with a warning that it's more secure in case a malicious user was able to get a command named 'su' into your path ahead of the binary you're intending to execute. I use: sudo /bin/su - Although, presumably under this logic, someone could have snuck another binary in named 'sudo', too. To take my own medicine, I should be doing: /usr/bin/sudo /bin/su - Putting my $0.02 in where it wasn't necessarily asked for, --bradoaks On 7/21/07, Johnny Hughes <johnny@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
centos wrote: > Hello > > Any time I am running sudo, I should have full path to the command, > for example sudo /sbin/ifconfig > > Is there any way to set the path for sudo ? use this command to get that (instead of just sudo): sudo su - _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
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