SU(1) | MidnightBSD General Commands Manual | SU(1) |
su
— substitute
user identity
su |
[- ] [-c
class] [-flms ]
[login [args]] |
The su
utility requests appropriate user
credentials via PAM and switches to that user ID (the default user is the
superuser). A shell is then executed.
PAM is used to set the policy
su(1) will use. In
particular, by default only users in the
“wheel
” group can switch to UID 0
(“root
”). This group requirement may
be changed by modifying the
“pam_group
” section of
/etc/pam.d/su. See
pam_group(8) for
details on how to modify this setting.
By default, the environment is unmodified with the exception of
USER
, HOME
, and
SHELL
. HOME
and
SHELL
are set to the target login's default values.
USER
is set to the target login, unless the target
login has a user ID of 0, in which case it is unmodified. The invoked shell
is the one belonging to the target login. This is the traditional behavior
of su
. Resource limits and session priority
applicable to the original user's login class (see
login.conf(5)) are
also normally retained unless the target login has a user ID of 0.
The options are as follows:
-c
class-f
-l
HOME
, SHELL
,
PATH
, TERM
, and
USER
. HOME
and
SHELL
are modified as above.
USER
is set to the target login.
PATH
is set to
“/bin:/usr/bin”.
TERM
is imported from your current environment.
Environment variables may be set or overridden from the login class
capabilities database according to the class of the target login. The
invoked shell is the target login's, and su
will
change directory to the target login's home directory. Resource limits and
session priority are modified to that for the target account's login
class.-
-l
.-m
su
will
fail.-s
su
will
fail.The -l
(or -
) and
-m
options are mutually exclusive; the last one
specified overrides any previous ones.
If the optional args are provided on the
command line, they are passed to the login shell of the target login. Note
that all command line arguments before the target login name are processed
by su
itself, everything after the target login name
gets passed to the login shell.
By default (unless the prompt is reset by a startup file) the super-user prompt is set to “#” to remind one of its awesome power.
Environment variables used by su
:
HOME
PATH
TERM
USER
su
unless the user ID is 0 (root).su
.su -m operator -c
poweroff
operator
, and runs the
command poweroff
. You will be asked for operator's
password unless your real UID is 0. Note that the
-m
option is required since user
“operator” does not have a valid shell by default. In this
example, -c
is passed to the shell of the user
“operator”, and is not interpreted as an argument to
su
.su -m
operator -c 'shutdown -p now'
-c
option
being passed to the shell. (Most shells expect the argument to
-c
to be a single word).su -m -c
staff operator -c 'shutdown -p now'
-c
option applies to su
while the second is an argument to the shell being invoked.su -l
foo
su -
foo
su
-
csh(1), sh(1), group(5), login.conf(5), passwd(5), environ(7), pam_group(8)
A su
command appeared in
Version 1 AT&T UNIX.
March 26, 2020 | midnightbsd-3.1 |