bashdb error after adding user to group listed via ls -l $(tty) - centos

I see that this question has been posted and answered. However, the post answer does not work for me. The posted answer has 2 solutions:
1 - run bashdb as root
this does not work for me because the script I am trying to debug must be run as mqm. This script exits when it sees that it is being run (via bashdb) as root.
2 - Add the user to the group listed by ls -l $(tty)
I ran this command and got:
mqm#localhost.localdomain(/var/mqm/scripts): ls -l $(tty)
crw--w----. 1 root tty 136, 0 Jun 17 10:11 /dev/pts/0
I ran (as root) usermod -a -G root mqm
and verified that the root group contains mqm -
then logged in as mqm, I re-ran
bashdb myscript
and again received this error
/usr/share/bashdb/lib/setshow.sh: line 91: /dev/pts/0: Permission denied

Bashdb also has a --tty option.
By default, bashdb ... is the same as bashdb --tty $(tty). So try giving an explicit --tty argument with a name of a tty or psuedo tty that you know you can write to.
Here is how you might test having access to the tty before running bash. Suppose the tty is /dev/pts/2 then run
echo hi > /dev/pts/2
If that works, then try bashdb -tty /dev/pts/2 ...

Related

Azure Pipelines is it possible to run bash command with sudo? [duplicate]

I am trying to compile some sources using a makefile. In the makefile there is a bunch of commands that need to be ran as sudo.
When I compile the sources from a terminal all goes fine and the make is paused the first time a sudo command is ran waiting for password. Once I type in the password, make resumes and completes.
But I would like to be able to compile the sources in NetBeans. So, I started a project and showed netbeans where to find the sources, but when I compile the project it gives the error:
sudo: no tty present and no askpass program specified
The first time it hits a sudo command.
I have looked up the issue on the internet and all the solutions I found point to one thing: disabling the password for this user. Since the user in question here is root. I do not want to do that.
Is there any other solution?
Granting the user to use that command without prompting for password should resolve the problem. First open a shell console and type:
sudo visudo
Then edit that file to add to the very end:
username ALL = NOPASSWD: /fullpath/to/command, /fullpath/to/othercommand
eg
john ALL = NOPASSWD: /sbin/poweroff, /sbin/start, /sbin/stop
will allow user john to sudo poweroff, start and stop without being prompted for password.
Look at the bottom of the screen for the keystrokes you need to use in visudo - this is not vi by the way - and exit without saving at the first sign of any problem. Health warning: corrupting this file will have serious consequences, edit with care!
Try:
Use NOPASSWD line for all commands, I mean:
jenkins ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
Put the line after all other lines in the sudoers file.
That worked for me (Ubuntu 14.04).
Try:
ssh -t remotehost "sudo <cmd>"
This will remove the above errors.
After all alternatives, I found:
sudo -S <cmd>
The -S (stdin) option causes sudo to read the password from the standard input instead of the terminal device.
Source
Above command still needs password to be entered. To remove entering password manually, in cases like jenkins, this command works:
echo <password> | sudo -S <cmd>
sudo by default will read the password from the attached terminal. Your problem is that there is no terminal attached when it is run from the netbeans console. So you have to use an alternative way to enter the password: that is called the askpass program.
The askpass program is not a particular program, but any program that can ask for a password. For example in my system x11-ssh-askpass works fine.
In order to do that you have to specify what program to use, either with the environment variable SUDO_ASKPASS or in the sudo.conf file (see man sudo for details).
You can force sudo to use the askpass program by using the option -A. By default it will use it only if there is not an attached terminal.
Try this one:
echo '' | sudo -S my_command
For Ubuntu 16.04 users
There is a file you have to read with:
cat /etc/sudoers.d/README
Placing a file with mode 0440 in /etc/sudoers.d/myuser with following content:
myuser ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
Should fix the issue.
Do not forget to:
chmod 0440 /etc/sudoers.d/myuser
Login into your linux. Fire following commands. Be careful, as editing sudoer is a risky proposition.
$ sudo visudo
Once vi editor opens make the following changes:
Comment out Defaults requiretty
# Defaults requiretty
Go to the end of the file and add
jenkins ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
If by any chance you came here because you can't sudo inside the Ubuntu that comes with Windows10
Edit the /etc/hosts file from Windows (with Notepad), it'll be located at: %localappdata\lxss\rootfs\etc, add 127.0.0.1 WINDOWS8, this will get rid of the first error that it can't find the host.
To get rid of the no tty present error, always do sudo -S <command>
This worked for me:
echo "myuser ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL" >> /etc/sudoers
where your user is "myuser"
for a Docker image, that would just be:
RUN echo "myuser ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL" >> /etc/sudoers
In Jenkins:
echo '<your-password>' | sudo -S command
Eg:-
echo '******' | sudo -S service nginx restart
You can use Mask Password Plugin to hide your password
Make sure the command you're sudoing is part of your PATH.
If you have a single (or multi, but not ALL) command sudoers entry, you'll get the sudo: no tty present and no askpass program specified when the command is not part of your path (and the full path is not specified).
You can fix it by either adding the command to your PATH or invoking it with an absolute path, i.e.
sudo /usr/sbin/ipset
Instead of
sudo ipset
Command sudo fails as it is trying to prompt on root password and there is no pseudo-tty allocated (as it's part of the script).
You need to either log-in as root to run this command or set-up the following rules in your /etc/sudoers
(or: sudo visudo):
# Members of the admin group may gain root privileges.
%admin ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL
Then make sure that your user belongs to admin group (or wheel).
Ideally (safer) it would be to limit root privileges only to specific commands which can be specified as %admin ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:/path/to/program
I think I can help someone with my case.
First, I changed the user setting in /etc/sudoers referring to above answer. But It still didn't work.
myuser ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
%mygroup ALL=(ALL:ALL) ALL
In my case, myuser was in the mygroup.
And I didn't need groups. So, deleted that line.
(Shouldn't delete that line like me, just marking the comment.)
myuser ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
It works!
Running shell scripts that have contain sudo commands in them from jenkins might not run as expected. To fix this, follow along
Simple steps:
On ubuntu based systems, run " $ sudo visudo "
this will open /etc/sudoers file.
If your jenkins user is already in that file, then modify to look like this:
jenkins ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
save the file
Relaunch your jenkins job
you shouldnt see that error message again :)
This error may also arise when you are trying to run a terminal command (that requires root password) from some non-shell script, eg sudo ls (in backticks) from a Ruby program. In this case, you can use Expect utility (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expect) or its alternatives.
For example, in Ruby to execute sudo ls without getting sudo: no tty present and no askpass program specified, you can run this:
require 'ruby_expect'
exp = RubyExpect::Expect.spawn('sudo ls', :debug => true)
exp.procedure do
each do
expect "[sudo] password for _your_username_:" do
send _your_password_
end
end
end
[this uses one of the alternatives to Expect TCL extension: ruby_expect gem].
For the reference, in case someone else encounter the same issue, I was stuck during a good hour with this error which should not happen since I was using the NOPASSWD parameter.
What I did NOT know was that sudo may raise the exact same error message when there is no tty and the command the user try to launch is not part of the allowed command in the /etc/sudoers file.
Here a simplified example of my file content with my issue:
bguser ALL = NOPASSWD: \
command_a arg_a, \
command_b arg_b \
command_c arg_c
When bguser will try to launch "sudo command_b arg_b" without any tty (bguser being used for some daemon), then he will encounter the error "no tty present and no askpass program specified".
Why?
Because a comma is missing at the end of line in the /etc/sudoers file...
(I even wonder if this is an expected behavior and not a bug in sudo since the correct error message for such case shoud be "Sorry, user bguser is not allowed to execute etc.")
I was getting this error because I had limited my user to only a single executable 'systemctl' and had misconfigured the visudo file.
Here's what I had:
jenkins ALL=NOPASSWD: systemctl
However, you need to include the full path to the executable, even if it is on your path by default, for example:
jenkins ALL=NOPASSWD: /bin/systemctl
This allows my jenkins user to restart services but not have full root access
If you add this line to your /etc/sudoers (via visudo) it will fix this problem without having to disable entering your password and when an alias for sudo -S won't work (scripts calling sudo):
Defaults visiblepw
Of course read the manual yourself to understand it, but I think for my use case of running in an LXD container via lxc exec instance -- /bin/bash its pretty safe since it isn't printing the password over a network.
Using pipeline:
echo your_pswd | sudo -S your_cmd
Using here-document:
sudo -S cmd <<eof
pwd
eof
#remember to put the above two lines without "any" indentations.
Open a terminal to ask password (whichever works):
gnome-terminal -e "sudo cmd"
xterm -e "sudo cmd"
I faced this issue when working on an Ubuntu 20.04 server.
I was trying to run a sudo command from a remote machine to deploy an app to the server. However when I run the command I get the error:
sudo: no tty present and no askpass program specified
The remote script failed with exit code 1
Here's how I fixed it:
The issue is caused by executing a sudo command which tries to request for a password, but sudo does not have access to a tty to prompt the user for a passphrase. As it can’t find a tty, sudo falls back to an askpass method but can’t find an askpass command configured, so the sudo command fails.
To fix this you need to be able to run sudo for that specific user with no password requirements. The no password requirements is configured in the /etc/sudoers file. To configure it run either of the commands below:
sudo nano /etc/sudoers
OR
sudo visudo
Note: This opens the /etc/sudoers file using your default editor.
Next, Add the following line at the bottom of the file:
# Allow members to run all commands without a password
my_user ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL
Note: Replace my_user with your actual user
If you want the user to run specific commands you can specify them
# Allow members to run specific commands without a password
my_user ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:/bin/myCommand
OR
# Allow members to run specific commands without a password
my_user ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: /bin/myCommand, /bin/myCommand, /bin/myCommand
Save the changes and exit the file.
For more help, read the resource in this link: sudo: no tty present and no askpass program specified
That's all.
I hope this helps
The solution to the problem is
If you came across this issue anywhere else apart from the Jenkins instance follow this from the 2nd step. The first step is for the user who is having issue with the Jenkins instance.
Go to Jenkins instance of Google Cloud Console.
Enter the commands
sudo su
visudo -f /etc/sudoers
Add following line at the end
jenkins ALL= NOPASSWD: ALL
Checkout here to understand the rootcause of this issue
No one told what could cause this error, in case of migration from one host to another, remember about checking hostname in sudoers file:
So this is my /etc/sudoers config
User_Alias POWERUSER = user_name
Cmnd_Alias SKILL = /root/bin/sudo_auth_wrapper.sh
POWERUSER hostname=(root:root) NOPASSWD: SKILL
if it doesn't match
uname -a
Linux other_hostname 3.10.17 #1 SMP Wed Oct 23 16:28:33 CDT 2013 x86_64 Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-4130T CPU # 2.90GHz GenuineIntel GNU/Linux
it will pop up this error:
no tty present and no askpass program specified
Other options, not based on NOPASSWD:
Start Netbeans with root privilege ((sudo netbeans) or similar) which will presumably fork the build process with root and thus sudo will automatically succeed.
Make the operations you need to do suexec -- make them owned by root, and set mode to 4755. (This will of course let any user on the machine run them.) That way, they don't need sudo at all.
Creating virtual hard disk files with bootsectors shouldn't need sudo at all. Files are just files, and bootsectors are just data. Even the virtual machine shouldn't necessarily need root, unless you do advanced device forwarding.
Although this question is old, it is still relevant for my more or less up-to-date system. After enabling debug mode of sudo (Debug sudo /var/log/sudo_debug all#info in /etc/sudo.conf) I was pointed to /dev: "/dev is world writable". So you might need to check the tty file permissions, especially those of the directory where the tty/pts node resides in.
I was able to get this done but please make sure to follow the steps properly.
This is for the anyone who is getting import errors.
Step1: Check if files and folders have got execute permission issue.
Linux user use:
chmod 777 filename
Step2: Check which user has the permission to execute it.
Step3: open terminal type this command.
sudo visudo
add this lines to the code below
www-data ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL
nobody ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:/ALL
this is to grant permission to execute the script and allow it to use all the libraries. The user generally is 'nobody' or 'www-data'.
now edit your code as
echo shell_exec('sudo -u the_user_of_the_file python your_file_name.py 2>&1');
go to terminal to check if the process is running
type this there...
ps aux | grep python
this will output all the process running in python.
Add Ons:
use the below code to check the users in your system
cut -d: -f1 /etc/passwd
Thank You!
1 open /etc/sudoers
type sudo vi /etc/sudoers. This will open your file in edit mode.
2 Add/Modify linux user
Look for the entry for Linux user. Modify as below if found or add a new line.
<USERNAME> ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
3 Save and Exit from edit mode
I had the same error message when I was trying to mount sshfs which required sudo : the command is something like this :
sshfs -o sftp_server="/usr/bin/sudo /usr/lib/openssh/sftp-server" user#my.server.tld:/var/www /mnt/sshfs/www
by adding the option -o debug
sshfs -o debug -o sftp_server="/usr/bin/sudo /usr/lib/openssh/sftp-server" user#my.server.tld:/var/www /mnt/sshfs/www
I had the same message of this question :
sudo: no tty present and no askpass program specified
So by reading others answer I became to make a file in /etc/sudoer.d/user on my.server.tld with :
user ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/lib/openssh/sftp-server
and now I able to mount the drive without giving too much extra right to my user.
Below actions work for on ubuntu20
edit /etc/sudoers
visudo
or
vi /etc/sudoers
add below content
userName ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
%sudo ALL=(ALL:ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL
I'm not sure if this is a more recent change, but I just had this problem and sudo -S worked for me.

cannot connect to "workspaceMount" at container launch from vscode

using vscode and wsl2, I have tried to launch a container using the default method and no customization. This generated the same error as below.
so following vscode docs I set a "workspaceMount" in devcontainer.json
"workspaceMount": "source=${localWorkspaceFolder},target=/workspaces/myRepo,type=bind,consistency=delegated",
"workspaceFolder": "/workspaces",
I select Reopen in container, the launch sequence happens but an error is generated
a mount config is invalid, make sure it has the right format and a source folder that exists on the machine where the Docker daemon is running
the log error is
Command failed: docker run -a STDOUT -a STDERR --mount source=d:\git\myRepo,target=/workspaces/myRepo,type=bind,consistency=delegated --mount type=volume,src=vscode,dst=/vscode -l vsch.quality=stable -l vsch.remote.devPort=0 -l vsch.local.folder=d:\git\myRepo --cap-add=SYS_PTRACE --security-opt seccomp=unconfined --entrypoint /bin/sh vsc-myRepo-a878aa9edbcf04f717c76e764dabcde6 -c echo Container started ; trap "exit 0" 15; while sleep 1 & wait $!; do :; done
by launching the container from docker desktop I can confirm
cd /workspaces
ls -l
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Dec 3 11:48 myRepo
Is this issue due to owner root:root ?
Should this be changed by chown in the Dokerfile? if so could you provide a sample code to do this, is it by RUN chown ...?
I guess you followed the documentation in https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/remote/containers-advanced
The source should contains the subfolder "myRepo" and the target only "workspaces"
"workspaceMount": "source=${localWorkspaceFolder}/myRepo,target=/workspaces,type=bind,consistency=delegated",
"workspaceFolder": "/workspaces",

rkt/image building: acbuild run instructions "ignored"

I'm experiencing unexpected behavior using acbuild run. To get used to rkt the idea was to start with a CentOS7 based container running a SSH host. The bare CentOS 7 container referenced below as centos7.aci was created on a up-to-date CentOS7 install using the instructions given here.
The script used to build the SSHd ACI is
#! /bin/bash
acbuild begin ./centos7.aci
acbuild run -- yum install -y openssh-server
acbuild run -- mkdir /var/run/sshd
acbuild run -- sed -i 's/PermitRootLogin prohibit-password/PermitRootLogin yes/' /etc/ssh/sshd_config
acbuild run -- sed 's#session\s*required\s*pam_loginuid.so#session optional pam_loginuid.so#g' -i /etc/pam.d/sshd
acbuild run -- ssh-keygen -A -C "" -N "" -q
acbuild run -- echo 'root:screencast' | chpasswd
acbuild set-name centos7-sshd
acbuild set-exec -- /usr/sbin/sshd -D
acbuild port add ssh tcp 22
acbuild write --overwrite centos7-sshd.aci
acbuild end
When it's spinned up using rkt run --insecure-options=image ./centos7-sshd.aci
the server runs but connection attempts fail because the password is not accepted. If I use rkt enter to get into the running container and re-run echo 'root:screencast' | chpasswd inside, I can login. So that acbuild run instruction has just not worked for some reason... To test a bit more, I replaced it by
acbuild run -- mkdir ~/.ssh
acbuild run -- echo "<rkt host SSH public key>“ >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
to enable key based instead of password login. It doesn't work: the key is refused. The reason is obvious once you look into the container: there's no authorized_keys file in ~/.ssh/. If I add a
acbuild run -- touch ~/.ssh/authorized_keys instruction before the key appending attempt, the file is created but it's still empty. So again a acbuild run instruction didn't work - without error notice. May it be related to the fact that both „ignored“ instructions use operators like >> and | ? All commands shown in the examples I've seen don't use any such operators yet the docs don't mention anything and a Google search doesn't help either. In dockerfile RUN instructions they also work fine... what is going wrong here?
P.S.: I tried to use the chroot instead of the default systemd-nspawn engine in the „ignored“ acbuild run instructions => same results
P.P.S.: there's no acbuild tag yet on StackOverflow so I had to tag this as rkt - could somebody with enough reputation create one please? Thx
Ok, I understood what happens using the the acbuild run --debug option.
When
acbuild run -- echo 'root:screencast' | chpasswd
gets executed it returns Running: [echo root:screencast] , the pipe is executed on the host machine. To get the intended result it should be
acbuild run -- /bin/sh -c "echo 'root:screencast' | chpasswd"
or in generic form
acbuild run -- /bin/sh -c "<cmd with pipes>"
as explained here

Perl Returning error for ls -l command

I am running a perl script from Nagios to check some files for certain characteristics on a windows machine. When I run the script from Nagios it responds with a result of:
UNKNOWN ERROR - execution of LANG=C ls -l resulted in an error 32512 -
My Code is from this GitHub with a single modification of line 168 so I can use it with windows:
use lib 'C$\Progra~1\Nagios\NRDS_Win\plugins';
The odd thing is the program actually outputs the expected result from the command line on the windows machine.
Here is the command:
check_files.pl -D c:\logs -F Health.log -a '~,300'
Here is an example:
CRITICAL - Health.log is 10703 (more than 300) seconds old - 1
Health.log files found
I modified line that defined LANG=C ls -l in the code but now i just get:
UNKNOWN ERROR - could not execute ls -l - No such file or directory
ls is unix command and by default there is no such command in windows.
If you need it, you can install it e.g. from GNU CoreUtils
You also need to change shell command on line 639 from LANG=C ls -l to just ls -l because in windows you can't set environment variables like that.

How to resolve cvs error: no such system user

I am trying to setup CVS on one our server ( let's call it JEDI). Then there is production server called DVADER.
I am able to log in from DVADER to JEDI using cvs login command with production user STWAR. However, as soon as I do cvs status I get following error :
Fatal error, aborting.
dsicnspr: no such system user
I have setup .passwd in CVSROOT folder for production user STWAR account on DVADER as shown below.
STWAR:hsfwfewiiu34de
However, there is no account of STWAR which is our production id on JEDI which is CVS server. So there is no entry of STWAR in /etc/passwd file on JEDI. I also tried using SystemAuth=no in config file inside CVSROOT but that is not working.
JEDI the CVS Server is also used for development and have other user account e.g. LIA who are able to login to JEDI.
Can anyone please tell me how to get rid of this error ? Do I need to setup account for STWAR
on JEDI and make an entry in /etc/passwd file ?
http://blog.jdknight.me/2015/03/how-to-setup-cvs-server-pserver-on.html
sudo chown -R :cvs /opt/cvsroot
sudo chmod -R g+ws /opt/cvsroot
(if you have selinux enforcing)
semanage fcontext -a -t cvs_data_t '/opt/cvsroot(/.*)?'
restorecon -R -v /opt/cvsroot
For example:
[root#*** ~]# ls -l /usr/local/repo/CVSROOT/passwd*
**-rw-rwSr--**. 1 root cvs 23 Nov 30 10:51 /usr/local/repo/CVSROOT/passwd -> no error
**-rw-r--r--**. 1 root cvs 1033 Dec 10 13:59 /usr/local/repo/CVSROOT/passwd.backup -> error as your questions above!