su — run a command with substitute user and group ID
su [options] [−] [ user [ argument... ] ]
su allows commands to be run with a substitute user and group ID.
When called with no user specified, su defaults to running an
interactive shell as root. When user is specified, additional
arguments can be
supplied, in which case they are passed to the shell.
For backward compatibility, su defaults to not change
the current directory and to only set the environment
variables HOME and SHELL (plus USER and LOGNAME if the target user is not root). It is
recommended to always use the −−login option (instead of its
shortcut −) to avoid side
effects caused by mixing environments.
This version of su uses PAM for authentication, account and session management. Some configuration options found in other su implementations, such as support for a wheel group, have to be configured via PAM.
su is mostly designed for unprivileged users, the recommended solution for privileged users (e.g., scripts executed by root) is to use non-set-user-ID command runuser(1) that does not require authentication and provide separate PAM configuration. If the PAM session is not required at all then the recommend solution is to use command setpriv(1).
Note that su
in all cases use PAM (pam_getenvlist(3)) to do the final
environment modification. Command-line options such as
−−login and
−−preserve−environment
affect the environment before it is modified by PAM.
−c,
−−command=commandPass command to the shell
with the −c
option.
−f,
−−fastPass −f to the
shell, which may or may not be useful, depending on the
shell.
−g,
−−group=groupSpecify the primary group. This option is available to the root user only.
−G,
−−supp−group=groupSpecify a supplementary group. This option is
available to the root user only. The first specified
supplementary group is also used as a primary group if
the option −−group is not
specified.
−,
−l, −−loginStart the shell as a login shell with an environment similar to a real login:
oclears all the environment variables except
TERMand variables specified by−−whitelist−environmentoinitializes the environment variables
HOME,SHELL,USER,LOGNAME, andPATHochanges to the target user's home directory
osets argv[0] of the shell to '
−' in order to make the shell a login shell
−m,
−p,
−−preserve−environmentPreserve the entire environment, i.e., do not set
HOME, SHELL, USER or LOGNAME. This option is ignored if
the option −−login is specified.
−P,
−−ptyCreate a pseudo-terminal for the session. The independent terminal provides better security as the user does not share a terminal with the original session. This can be used to avoid TIOCSTI ioctl terminal injection and other security attacks against terminal file descriptors. The entire session can also be moved to the background (e.g., "su −−pty − username −c application &"). If the pseudo-terminal is enabled, then su works as a proxy between the sessions (copy stdin and stdout).
This feature is mostly designed for interactive sessions. If the standard input is not a terminal, but for example a pipe (e.g., echo "date" | su −−pty), then the ECHO flag for the pseudo-terminal is disabled to avoid messy output.
−s,
−−shell=shellRun the specified shell instead of the default. The shell to run is selected according to the following rules, in order:
othe shell specified with
−−shellothe shell specified in the environment variable
SHELL, if the−−preserve−environmentoption is usedothe shell listed in the passwd entry of the target user
o/bin/sh
If the target user has a restricted shell (i.e., not
listed in /etc/shells), the −−shell option and the
SHELL environment
variables are ignored unless the calling user is
root.
−−session−command=commandSame as −c, but do
not create a new session. (Discouraged.)
−w,
−−whitelist−environment=listDon't reset the environment variables specified in
the comma-separated list when clearing
the environment for −−login. The whitelist is
ignored for the environment variables HOME, SHELL, USER, LOGNAME, and PATH.
−V,
−−versionDisplay version information and exit.
−h,
−−helpDisplay help text and exit.
Upon receiving either SIGINT, SIGQUIT or SIGTERM, su terminates its child and
afterwards terminates itself with the received signal. The
child is terminated by SIGTERM, after unsuccessful attempt
and 2 seconds of delay the child is killed by SIGKILL.
su reads the
/etc/default/su and
/etc/login.defs configuration
files. The following configuration items are relevant for
su:
FAIL_DELAY (number)
Delay in seconds in case of an authentication failure. The number must be a non-negative integer.
ENV_PATH (string)
Defines the
PATHenvironment variable for a regular user. The default value is/usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin.
ENV_ROOTPATH (string)
ENV_SUPATH (string)
Defines the PATH environment variable for root.
ENV_SUPATHtakes precedence. The default value is/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin.
ALWAYS_SET_PATH
(boolean)
If set to yes and −−login and −−preserve−environment were not specified su initializes
PATH.
The environment variable PATH may be different on systems where
/bin and /sbin are merged into /usr; this variable is also affected by the
−−login command-line
option and the PAM system setting (e.g., pam_env(8)).
su normally returns the exit status of the command it executed. If the command was killed by a signal, su returns the number of the signal plus 128.
Exit status generated by su itself:
1Generic error before executing the requested command
126The requested command could not be executed
127The requested command was not found
/etc/pam.d/sudefault PAM configuration file
/etc/pam.d/su-lPAM configuration file if −−login is specified
/etc/default/sucommand specific logindef config file
/etc/login.defsglobal logindef config file
For security reasons, su always logs failed log-in attempts to the btmp file, but it does not write to the lastlog file at all. This solution can be used to control su behavior by PAM configuration. If you want to use the pam_lastlog(8) module to print warning message about failed log-in attempts then pam_lastlog(8) has to be configured to update the lastlog file as well. For example by:
session required pam_lastlog.so nowtmp
This su command was derived from coreutils' su, which was based on an implementation by David MacKenzie. The util-linux version has been refactored by Karel Zak.
The su command is part of the util-linux package and is available from Linux Kernel Archive
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