Introduction
The
sudo
command provides a mechanism for granting administrator privileges, ordinarily only available to the root user, to normal users. This guide will show you the easiest way to create a new user with sudo access on CentOS, without having to modify your server's sudoers
file. If you want to configure sudo for an existing user, simply skip to step 3.Steps to Create a New Sudo User
Step 1: Log in to your server as the
root
user.
- $ ssh root@server_ip_address
Step 2: Use the
adduser
command to add a new user to your system.
Be sure to replace username with the user that you want to create.
- $ adduser username
Use the
passwd
command to update the new user's password.- $ passwd username
- Set and confirm the new user's password at the prompt. A strong password is highly recommended!
- Set password prompts:Changing password for user username. New password: Retype new password: passwd: all authentication tokens updated successfully.
Step 3: Use the
usermod
command to add the user to the wheel
group.
- $ usermod -aG wheel username
By default, on CentOS, members of the
wheel
group have sudo privileges.
Step 4: Test sudo access on new user account
- Use the
su
command to switch to the new user account.- $ su - username
- As the new user, verify that you can use sudo by prepending "sudo" to the command that you want to run with superuser privileges.
- $ sudo command_to_run
- For example, you can list the contents of the
/root
directory, which is normally only accessible to the root user.- $ sudo ls -la /root
- The first time you use
sudo
in a session, you will be prompted for the password of the user account. Enter the password to proceed.Output:[sudo] password for username:If your user is in the proper group and you entered the password correctly, the command that you issued with sudo should run with root privileges.
Cheers!
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