Commercial Support Now Available For Sudo 30
Mr. Christmas Lights writes "sudo has been free software for over 20 years and 'allows a system administrator to give certain users (or groups of users) the ability to run some (or all) commands as root or another user while logging the commands and arguments.' (Previous /. stories include how you can use it to distribute root access and also how Microsoft patents sudo - ummmm, have they heard of prior art?!?) While it will continue to be freely available, Todd Miller (the sudo maintainer for the last 10+ years) has decided to offer commercial support. For those thousands of Sysadmins out there who have benefited from sudo, here's your chance to thank Todd for a wonderful tool and also help support further development of sudo."
Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Funny)
2. Add commercial support for people too lazy to RTFM
3. Submit to slashdot
4. Profit!
wait a minute...
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
Believe it or not, some companies won't accept third-party software for fear of it violating support contracts from major vendors ("you installed third-party freeware on your system? Right then, that'll be the cause of all the problems you are seing, and we don't support that"). If it's a commercial product you can suddenly have all kinds of contracts and certifications about not breaking existing systems, and in the commercial world that's what matters most.
All that without changing a single line of useful time-proven code.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Insightful)
Think about what you're saying. Yeah, if you're interested in learning, it's not a big deal. If you treat your software strictly as a tool...
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:1)
Have you ever seen a single sudoers file for a large company which can be distributed to hundreds of hosts with different purposes and give the right people the right access across the entire network?
Having seen one of these, it gave me a newfound appreciation for how powerful of a tool sudo is in the right hands. I had been a system administrator using sudo for over a decade before I saw that. How much you kno
I'm always for contributing cash or time .. but (Score:2)
Since sudo doesn't need any manuals than those that already exist , uses PAM and needs 0% maintanence, I fail to get what the commercial license brings ?. Since sudo is a regular systems tool, the "we only use supported tools" point also doesn't really matter as I already have umbrella vendor support for it.
If it's for patent protection I won't part a dime !!.
Re:I'm always for contributing cash or time .. but (Score:5, Insightful)
Everybody's happy.
Re:I'm always for contributing cash or time .. but (Score:2)
But it's just a tool, like hundereds of others you may use at the command line. Whats the difference between this and ls, find, grep, awk, df, du, ps... need I go on? Is a commercial company going to pay for support for each command line tool its sysadmin uses? I don't think so somehow...
Re:I'm always for contributing cash or time .. but (Score:1)
Re:I'm always for contributing cash or time .. but (Score:2)
"Windows.RTM" from article (Score:2)
Windows.RTFM
I tell ya, if we can expect the 2999 other patents (for this year) to be along this line, I think we can see a new strategy of Microsofts becoming clear.
Now announcing commercial support for ls, du, df (Score:3, Funny)
DedaSys is proud to announce our exclusive commercial support program for the ls, du, and df utilities.
These time-tested tools just got better with the backing of a consulting and training organization that can adapt them to your enterprise disk management needs.
But wait, that's not all, order now and you'll receive documentation for all three at *no extra charge*.
http://dedasys.com/ [dedasys.com]
Re:Now announcing commercial support for ls, du, d (Score:1)
Re:Now announcing commercial support for ls, du, d (Score:2)
ACLs (Score:2, Informative)
With it you have better control, it's more dynamic and powerful. At first it may look complex, but you will develop understanding of them really fast, and it will be well worth it.
Try it out. [daemonnews.org]
Re:ACLs (Score:1)
Who is this 'Todd Miller' you speak of? (Score:2, Funny)
Have I? I wish I had a paypal account and hope some
I think I should take him through the courts for some patent violation or something!
He might be older than me and cite prior art though!
(from back when the web was young, but I'm dating myself...)
From his site, either he is older than me, or he has unusual tastes!
Re:Who is this 'Todd Miller' you speak of? (Score:2)
Kinky. Sounds like something from Heinlein's "All You Zombies" or Gerrold's "The Man Who Folded Himself".
op... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:op... (Score:2)
I'll start with this much: RunAs is certainly a hell of a lot easier to use.
Re:op... (Score:1)
Re:op... (Score:1)
You see, Windows and other unixes (FreeBSD etc) have ACLs. You can assign permissions on a file to multiple groups and users. If I want "jimbo" to be able to execute "sol.exe", I give jimbo execute permissions, or have him inherit them from a group he's in.
That is what "grained access control" is. Not a cheesy app that lets jimbo become "root" (or anyone else). Jimbo's actions are logged as jimbo.
Linux lacks this, and thus needs sudo.
RunAs is just for tho
Comments from the article poster (Score:5, Informative)
I submitted this story because Todd is one of the "good guys" out there IMHO. I agree that USING sudo isn't that difficult (especially in simple environments), but writing it is a bit more work and remember that sudo is a privilaged program so it needs to be pretty darn "tight" in terms of security stuff, and if you read through the release notes, there are all sorts of interesting subtle issues that have been addressed, plus the feature set has expanded - for example, LDAP support.
Todd has selflessly maintained/updated/supported sudo for over a decade - anyone on his Email lists know that he responds pretty darn quick. And he's not trying to "pull a RedHat" here - you can continue to use those channels and get the same code base for free. I.e. he's done such a good job that it is fair to ask the question "why buy support" since you get it for free anyway!
First, as correctly pointed out, if you are a big Corporation, they often like the "security" of having a support contract - yea, it's kinda dumb, but anyone who works at a big company knows what I'm talking about.
And second, if you appreciate good software, here's an easy way to toss a few $$$ Todd's way to thank him for all his work. In this day-n-age of spammers/slimebags all trying to make a buck, Todd is a throwback to the "free sharing" of an earlier era of the Internet.
Disclaimer: I have used sudo for over a decade (and also live in the Boulder, Colorado area), but otherwise have no profession/personal relationship with Todd. Like I said, I just think he's a "good guy" who deserved a little bit of recognition.
Yes, there's a point (Score:5, Informative)
This is also an experiment to see if I can make free software pay the bills. I'm currently without regular employment and I need to find ways to fund my sudo and OpenBSD developement work...