Multiple commands in sudo over ssh in shell script - linux

My script is as below.
#!/bin/bash
version = 1.1
echo "Enter username"
read UserName
ssh -t $UserName#server bash -c " '
./runSomeScript
echo "Entering Sudo"
sudo -s -u user1 -c "cd random; ./randomscrip xx-$version-yy"
'"
But this is not working.
Basically i want to do a ssh to a account. And then runSomeScript
Then do a sudo with user as user1 and then run commands cd random and ./randomscrip (with xx-Version-yy as argument) as the sudo user only.
But the commands inside sudo are not working.

Your quoting is a little careless. You're using double-quotes for the first and third levels of quoting, and the shell can't tell one from the other. Do something like this instead:
sudoScript="cd random; ./randomscrip xx-${version}-yy"
sshScript='
./runSomeScript
echo "Entering Sudo"
sudo -s -u user1 bash -c '"'${sudoScript}'"'
'
ssh -t ${UserName}#server "${sshScript}"
But beware that if you embed any single-quotes, it will still go wrong unless you add a layer of shell-quoting.
Finally, remove the spaces around = when you assign to version.

Related

Unix: 'su user' not working and remains root inside SSH if condition [duplicate]

I've written a script that takes, as an argument, a string that is a concatenation of a username and a project. The script is supposed to switch (su) to the username, cd to a specific directory based upon the project string.
I basically want to do:
su $USERNAME;
cd /home/$USERNAME/$PROJECT;
svn update;
The problem is that once I do an su... it just waits there. Which makes sense since the flow of execution has passed to switching to the user. Once I exit, then the rest of the things execute but it doesn't work as desired.
I prepended su to the svn command but the command failed (i.e. it didn't update svn in the directory desired).
How do I write a script that allows the user to switch user and invoke svn (among other things)?
Much simpler: use sudo to run a shell and use a heredoc to feed it commands.
#!/usr/bin/env bash
whoami
sudo -i -u someuser bash << EOF
echo "In"
whoami
EOF
echo "Out"
whoami
(answer originally on SuperUser)
The trick is to use "sudo" command instead of "su"
You may need to add this
username1 ALL=(username2) NOPASSWD: /path/to/svn
to your /etc/sudoers file
and change your script to:
sudo -u username2 -H sh -c "cd /home/$USERNAME/$PROJECT; svn update"
Where username2 is the user you want to run the SVN command as and username1 is the user running the script.
If you need multiple users to run this script, use a %groupname instead of the username1
You need to execute all the different-user commands as their own script. If it's just one, or a few commands, then inline should work. If it's lots of commands then it's probably best to move them to their own file.
su -c "cd /home/$USERNAME/$PROJECT ; svn update" -m "$USERNAME"
Here is yet another approach, which was more convenient in my case (I just wanted to drop root privileges and do the rest of my script from restricted user): you can make the script restart itself from the correct user. This approach is more readable than using sudo or su -c with a "nested script". Let's suppose it is started as root initially. Then the code will look like this:
#!/bin/bash
if [ $UID -eq 0 ]; then
user=$1
dir=$2
shift 2 # if you need some other parameters
cd "$dir"
exec su "$user" "$0" -- "$#"
# nothing will be executed beyond that line,
# because exec replaces running process with the new one
fi
echo "This will be run from user $UID"
...
Use a script like the following to execute the rest or part of the script under another user:
#!/bin/sh
id
exec sudo -u transmission /bin/sh - << eof
id
eof
Use sudo instead
EDIT: As Douglas pointed out, you can not use cd in sudo since it is not an external command. You have to run the commands in a subshell to make the cd work.
sudo -u $USERNAME -H sh -c "cd ~/$PROJECT; svn update"
sudo -u $USERNAME -H cd ~/$PROJECT
sudo -u $USERNAME svn update
You may be asked to input that user's password, but only once.
It's not possible to change user within a shell script. Workarounds using sudo described in other answers are probably your best bet.
If you're mad enough to run perl scripts as root, you can do this with the $< $( $> $) variables which hold real/effective uid/gid, e.g.:
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
$user = shift;
if (!$<) {
$> = getpwnam $user;
$) = getgrnam $user;
} else {
die 'must be root to change uid';
}
system('whoami');
This worked for me
I split out my "provisioning" from my "startup".
# Configure everything else ready to run
config.vm.provision :shell, path: "provision.sh"
config.vm.provision :shell, path: "start_env.sh", run: "always"
then in my start_env.sh
#!/usr/bin/env bash
echo "Starting Server Env"
#java -jar /usr/lib/node_modules/selenium-server-standalone-jar/jar/selenium-server-standalone-2.40.0.jar &
#(cd /vagrant_projects/myproj && sudo -u vagrant -H sh -c "nohup npm install 0<&- &>/dev/null &;bower install 0<&- &>/dev/null &")
cd /vagrant_projects/myproj
nohup grunt connect:server:keepalive 0<&- &>/dev/null &
nohup apimocker -c /vagrant_projects/myproj/mock_api_data/config.json 0<&- &>/dev/null &
Inspired by the idea from #MarSoft but I changed the lines like the following:
USERNAME='desireduser'
COMMAND=$0
COMMANDARGS="$(printf " %q" "${#}")"
if [ $(whoami) != "$USERNAME" ]; then
exec sudo -E su $USERNAME -c "/usr/bin/bash -l $COMMAND $COMMANDARGS"
exit
fi
I have used sudo to allow a password less execution of the script. If you want to enter a password for the user, remove the sudo. If you do not need the environment variables, remove -E from sudo.
The /usr/bin/bash -l ensures, that the profile.d scripts are executed for an initialized environment.

How can I automatically respond to a password prompt via the command line?

I'm looking to respond to a password prompt in the linux terminal. I know how to do this with echo and a non-password prompt. For example, let's say whatsyourname.sh prompted me for a string with my name after being ran, but didn't allow my name to be passed as an argument in the inital command. I would do the following:
echo -e "dan" | ./whatsyourname.sh
However, if I ran a command that asked me for a password after being ran, the following does not work:
echo -e "supersecurepassword" | sudo apt-get update
I'm guessing this has something to do with the fact that the characters are hidden while a password is being input in the command line. How would I respond to a password prompt within the inital command?
You're looking for sudo -S
Explaining -S - man sudo
-S, --stdin
Write the prompt to the standard error and read the password from the standard input instead of
using the terminal device. The password must be followed by a newline character.
Simple,
#!/bin/bash
echo "notsecure" | sudo -S apt-get update
Variable,
#!/bin/bash
pass="notsecure"
echo $pass | sudo -S apt-get update
Lets still type it,
#!/bin/bash
read -s -p "[sudo] sudo password for $(whoami): " pass
echo $pass | sudo -S apt-get update
Explaining -s and -p - help read
-r do not allow backslashes to escape any characters
-s do not echo input coming from a terminal
Handy if you make a script that logs into multiple servers to view route -n for example.

Run command as root within shell script

I'm working on a script that will shred a usb drive and install Kali linux with encrypted persistent data.
#! /bin/bash
cd ~/Documents/Other/ISOs/Kali
echo "/dev/sdx x=?"
read x
echo "how many passes to wipe? 1 will be sufficient."
read n
echo "sd$x will be wiped $n times."
read -p "do you want to continue? [y/N] " -n 1 -r
echo
if [[ ! $REPLY =~ ^[Yy]$ ]]
then
exit 1
fi
echo "Your role in the installation process is not over. You will be prompted to type YES and a passphrase."
sudo shred -vz --iterations=$n /dev/sd$x
echo "Wiped. Installing Kali"
sudo dd if=kali-linux-2.0-amd64.iso of=/dev/sd$x bs=512k
echo "Installed. Making persistence."
y=3
sudo parted /dev/sd$x mkpart primary 3.5GiB 100%
x=$x$y
sudo cryptsetup --verbose --verify-passphrase luksFormat /dev/sd$x
sudo cryptsetup luksOpen /dev/sd$x my_usb
sudo mkfs.ext3 -L persistence /dev/mapper/my_usb
sudo e2label /dev/mapper/my_usb persistence
sudo mkdir -p /mnt/my_usb
sudo mount /dev/mapper/my_usb /mnt/my_usb
sudo -i
echo "/ union" > /mnt/my_usb/persistence.conf
umount /dev/mapper/my_usb
cryptsetup luksClose /dev/mapper/my_usb
echo "Persistence complete. Installation complete."
It works nearly perfectly. These commands individually entered into the terminal will create the desired effect, but the problem comes in at line 37:
sudo echo "/ union" > /mnt/my_usb/persistence.conf
That command won't work unless I'm logged in as root user. To solve this I tried adding the sudo -i command before, but once I do that all of the following commands are skipped.
It's okay if the solution suggested requires me to type in the password. I don't want the password stored in the script, that's just wreckless.
Side note, I didn't make a generic form for this question because I want other people to be able use this if they like it.
The problem is that the echo runs with root privilege but the redirection happens in the original shell as the non-root user. Instead, try running an explicit sh under sudo and do the redirection in there
sudo /bin/sh -c 'echo "/ union" > /mnt/my_usb/persistence.conf'
The problem is that when you type in the following command:
sudo echo "/ union" > /mnt/my_usb/persistence.conf
Only the "echo" will be run as root through sudo, but the redirection to the file using > will still be executed as the "normal" user, because it is not a command but something performed directly by the shell.
My usual solution is to use teeso that it runs as a command and not as a shell built-in operation, like this:
echo "/ union" | sudo tee /mnt/my_usb/persistence.conf >/dev/null
Now the tee command will be run as root through sudo and will be allowed to write to the file. >/dev/null is just added to keep the output of the script clean. If you ever want to append instead of overwrite (e.g. you would be using >>normally), then use tee -a.

How to execute multiple commands with sudo in script [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
How to run two commands with sudo?
(11 answers)
Closed 7 years ago.
Can we use heredocs to run multiple commands using sudo?
I am facing an issue (need to pass password for every command) while running
multiple commands:
echo 'password'| sudo -S ls
echo 'password'| sudo -S cat /var/log/abc.log
Can anyone help me how to automate this in a script? Like:
echo 'password' | sudo -S << ENDBLOCK
ls
cat
ENDBLOCK
you can run sh -c ..., but remember to quote properly.
sudo sh -c 'id; echo another command ; id'
sudo must see this as a single argument for the sh command.
Of course you can use new line instead of semicolon:
sudo sh -c '
echo "I am root"
id
echo "another command"
id
'
One way is to write a script with all the things you need to do with sudo and then run the script with sudo.
you could put all your commands in a script. Then
sudo ./script.sh
put permissions for script.sh in /etc/sudoers.d; that way you'll never need to type your password again (for that script)

Stop being root in the middle of a script that was run with sudo

There is a list of commands that only succeed when they are prefaced with sudo.
There is another list of commands that only succeed when the user runs them without sudo.
I want to execute all of these commands from the same script.
I'd like to avoid having to do the following:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
sudo sudo_command_one;
sudo sudo_command_two;
sudo sudo_command_three;
non_sudo_command;
sudo sudo_command_four;
The reason for this, is because sudo has a time-out, and these commands will likely take a long time. I don't want to be burdened with having to re-type the sudo password occasionally. I could perhaps extend the time-out of sudo indefinitely, but that is also something I would prefer to avoid if there is an easier way.
Therefore, I'm going to run the script like this:
sudo ./script
But this will prevent the non-sudo commands from working.
What are the missing commands I need:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
sudo_command_one;
sudo_command_two;
sudo_command_three;
[turn sudo off for a moment]
non_sudo_command;
[ok, turn sudo back on]
sudo_command_four;
Unfortunately, the order of the commands cannot be rearranged so that I run all the sudo commands first, followed by all the non-sudo commands(or vice versa).
In a script run by sudo, use:
su -c "shell command; shell command" $SUDO_USER
within that script to execute commands as the normal user who invoked sudo.
This works because sudo sets the environment variable SUDO_USER to the original username.
If you have a bunch of commands to run as the original user, you could use a hereis document.
Here is an example script file as proof of concept:
myscript.sh
#!/bin/bash
echo "Part 1"
echo "now running as:"
whoami
echo "SUDO_USER is:"
echo $SUDO_USER
su $SUDO_USER <<EOF
echo "Part 2"
echo "now running as:"
whoami
echo "SUDO_USER is:"
env | grep ^SUDO_USER
sleep 5
EOF
echo "Part 3"
echo "now running as:"
whoami
echo "SUDO_USER is:"
echo $SUDO_USER
And here's the output on sudo ./myscript.sh
Part 1
now running as:
root
SUDO_USER is:
paul
Part 2
now running as:
paul
SUDO_USER is:
SUDO_USER=paul
Part 3
now running as:
root
SUDO_USER is:
paul
Warning: This technique doesn't work so well with nested sudo. If sudo is nested twice, e.g.
sudo su
echo $SUDO_USER
---> me
sudo su
echo $SUDO_USER
---> root
SUDO_USER will return root, not the original username. su $SUDO_USER would then keep running as root. Be careful to avoid that scenario, and it should work ok.
Here is how I would run it in a script.
#! /bin/bash
if [[ $EUID -ne 0 ]]; then
echo "This script must be run as root";
exit 1;
else
NON_ROOT_USER=$(who am i | awk '{print $1}');
echo "root ran this echo.";
sudo -u $NON_ROOT_USER echo "$NON_ROOT_USER ran this echo.";
fi
sudo ./script.sh

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