I tried put my user in the sudores file to avoid yast to ask for password every time i open it… but no luck. I am using 11.1 with gnome.
any tip ?
best
I tried put my user in the sudores file to avoid yast to ask for password every time i open it… but no luck. I am using 11.1 with gnome.
any tip ?
best
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Simply putting your user in the /etc/sudoers file doesn’t mean you won’t
get prompted for a password. In order to avoid a password prompt you
also must tell sudo (in the same sudoers file) that you don’t want to be
prompted for a password. There is an example (commented out) in the
default /etc/sudoers file to let this work for the ‘wheel’ group members:
<quote source="/etc/sudoers" os=“SLED 10 SP2 x86_64”>
</quote>
Notice that it says everybody in the wheel group can run anything
anywhere and they can do it with no password prompt. Personally, as
seldom as you should be needing to use sudo in day-to-day stuff, I don’t
think this option is necessary. You can also tell sudo to prompt for
your own user’s password instead of the ‘root’ user’s password which I
do recommend so casual passers-by don’t suddenly start running sudo
nuking your system, and so you have a second to consider if the command
you are running is really necessary and setup properly with ‘root’
privileges.
Good luck.
zilli daniel wrote:
> I tried put my user in the sudores file to avoid yast to ask for
> password every time i open it… but no luck. I am using 11.1 with gnome.
>
>
> any tip ?
> best
>
>
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thank you for your explanation but didn’t work. In this link
i have the solution for KDE, but not to GNOME.
Default kdesu to use sudo and not su | Ben Kevan’s Blog
@Mon, 22 Dec 2008 01:16:02 +0000, zilli daniel write:
> thank you for your explanation but didn’t work. In this link i have the
> solution for KDE, but not to GNOME.
>
> ‘Default kdesu to use sudo and not su | Ben Kevan’s Blog’
> (http://www.benkevan.com/blog/default-kdesu-to-use-sudo-and-not-su/)
>
>
I did not understand why you have a problem with this… I have sudo with no pass working good…
open yast2 now(/sbin/yast2) alt+F2
Security&Users>Sudo
window appear
press add
new window appear
Users, Group - %UserNamethatRunSudo
Host- ALL
RunAs-ALL
click in box with no password
Add command(button) - put “ALL” in upper field
WBR
I think he wants the same as when logged in as root.
no password prompts to bug you.
correct me if I am wrong.
you might as well log in as root
Log in as root ?!?!?!?
dillj is right…
just look this link
Default kdesu to use sudo and not su | Ben Kevan’s Blog
and you will know what i am talking…
the password is
root