On Mon, 2014-05-05 at 10:02 -0400, Rob Crittenden wrote: > Dean Hunter wrote: > > On Sat, 2014-05-03 at 22:50 +0200, Lukas Slebodnik wrote: > >> On (03/05/14 10:39), Dean Hunter wrote: > >> >On Sat, 2014-05-03 at 12:36 +0200, Lukas Slebodnik wrote: > >> > > >> >> On (01/05/14 15:53), Dean Hunter wrote: > >> >> >On Thu, 2014-05-01 at 16:32 -0400, Dmitri Pal wrote: > >> >> >> On 05/01/2014 04:07 PM, Dean Hunter wrote: > >> >> >> > >> >> >> > > >> >> >> > I just noticed that I had been incorrectly setting the NIS domain > >> >> >> > name since upgrading to Fedora 20 and FreeIPA 3.3.4, yet I appear > >> >> >> > to > >> >> >> > be successfully retrieving and using sudo rules from FreeIPA. Is > >> >> >> > sudo still using NIS-style netgroups? Is there still a requirement > >> >> >> > to set the NIS domain name? > >> >> >> > >> >> >> > >> >> >> I think NIS domain is needed for netgroups. If you are not using > >> >> >> netgroups in the sudo rules but just user groups you should be fine. > >> >> >> Is this the case with you? > >> >> >> If not please provide the logs and config. > >> >> >> > >> >> > > >> >> >I am not aware of using netgroups, either the IPA object or any other > >> >> >kind. I just remember that when I was first configuring sudo to > >> >> >retrieve rules from IPA it would not work until I set nisdomainname > >> >> >in /etc/rc.d/rc.local. Here is the quote from section 14.4 of the > >> >> >manual: > >> >> > > >> >> > > >> >> > Even though sudo uses NIS-style netgroups, it is not necessary > >> >> > to have a NIS server installed. Netgroups require that a NIS > >> >> > domain be named in their configuration, so sudo requires that a > >> >> > NIS domain be named for netgroups. However, that NIS domain > >> >> > does > >> >> > not actually need to exist. > >> >> > > >> >> > > >> >> >With Fedora 20 I can no longer find the emulation of rc.local that > >> >> >existed in Fedora 19. I did find fedora-domainname.service and started > >> >> >and enabled it but neglected to configure /etc/sysconfig/network. Yet > >> >> >IPA sudo rules appear to work. > >> >> > > >> >> Hope It helps you > >> >>http://www.redhat.com/archives/freeipa-users/2014-April/msg00248.html > >> >> > >> >> LS > >> > > >> > > >> >Thank you. Now that you point it out, I remember that this thread is > >> >where I first learned about fedora-domainname.service. I see: > >> > > >> > You would also need to set NIS domain name, otherwise SUDO will > >> > not correctly recognize SUDO rules targeted on host groups, > >> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > >> This is important part > >> > instead of hosts: > >> > > >> >which explains when sudo would need the NIS domain name. Since my sudo > >> >rules address user groups I guess there is no requirement for NIS domain > >> >name since they are working just fine: > >> Your sudo rules use host groups. > >> > >> > > >> > ipa sudorule-add desktop-admins --desc "Desktop > >> > Administrators" > >> > ipa sudorule-mod desktop-admins --cmdcat all > >> > ipa sudorule-add-host desktop-admins --hostgroups desktops > >> > ipa sudorule-add-option desktop-admins --sudooption "! > >> > authenticate" > >> > ipa sudorule-add-runasuser desktop-admins --users root > >> > ipa sudorule-add-runasgroup desktop-admins --groups root > >> > ipa sudorule-add-user desktop-admins --groups > >> > desktop-admins > >> > > >> > ipa sudorule-add server-admins --desc "Server > >> > Administrators" > >> > ipa sudorule-mod server-admins --cmdcat all > >> > ipa sudorule-add-host server-admins --hostgroups servers > >> hostgroups are reason why you need to configure NIS domain name. > >> hostgroups are also available as netgroups in compat tree and sudo reads > >> information from netgroups. > >> > >> > ipa sudorule-add-option server-admins --sudooption "! > >> > authenticate" > >> > ipa sudorule-add-runasuser server-admins --users root > >> > ipa sudorule-add-runasgroup server-admins --groups root > >> > ipa sudorule-add-user server-admins --groups > >> > server-admins > >> > > >> >However, I was really asking whether there had been a change in > >> >sssd/sudo behavior as it was my recollection that my sudo rules did not > >> >work at all in early IPA 3.n releases unless the NIS domain name was > >> >configured. > >> > > >> > >> LS > > > > I hear you and that is what I expected. However, the actual behavior > > seems to have changed with 3.3.4 and now 3.3.5. > > > > [dean@desktop <mailto:dean@desktop> ~]$ domainname --nis > > domainname: Local domain name not set > > > > [dean@desktop <mailto:dean@desktop> ~]$ sudo -l > > Matching Defaults entries for dean on desktop: > > requiretty, env_reset, env_keep="COLORS DISPLAY HOSTNAME > > HISTSIZE INPUTRC > > KDEDIR LS_COLORS", env_keep+="MAIL PS1 PS2 QTDIR USERNAME LANG > > LC_ADDRESS > > LC_CTYPE", env_keep+="LC_COLLATE LC_IDENTIFICATION LC_MEASUREMENT > > LC_MESSAGES", env_keep+="LC_MONETARY LC_NAME LC_NUMERIC LC_PAPER > > LC_TELEPHONE", env_keep+="LC_TIME LC_ALL LANGUAGE LINGUAS > > _XKB_CHARSET > > XAUTHORITY", secure_path=/sbin\:/bin\:/usr/sbin\:/usr/bin > > > > User dean may run the following commands on desktop: > > (root : root) NOPASSWD: ALL > > > > [dean@desktop <mailto:dean@desktop> ~]$ > > > > I think this is a good thing. I would just like to confirm that this is > > the new expected behavior and that I have not done something wrong. > > We'd need to see your sudo rules to know for sure. > > I don't think anything changed in the IPA code to change this behavior, > but we herd a lot of cats so something in another package may be different. > > rob
The sudo rules are listed above.
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