1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://github.com/ansible-collections/community.general.git synced 2024-09-14 20:13:21 +02:00
Commit graph

3 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
patchback[bot]
203747027e
Move licenses to LICENSES/, run add-license.py, add LICENSES/MIT.txt (#5065) (#5068)
* Move licenses to LICENSES/, run add-license.py, add LICENSES/MIT.txt.

* Replace 'Copyright:' with 'Copyright'

sed -i 's|Copyright:\(.*\)|Copyright\1|' $(rg -l 'Copyright:')

Co-authored-by: Maxwell G <gotmax@e.email>
(cherry picked from commit 123c7efe5e)

Co-authored-by: Felix Fontein <felix@fontein.de>
2022-08-05 13:17:19 +02:00
Felix Fontein
0b4a2bea01
Use become test framework for sudosu tests. (#2629) 2021-05-26 10:34:35 +02:00
Dag Wieers
db26514bf1
Add support for sudo su - using password auth (#2054)
* Add support for `sudo su -` using password auth

Allow users to run Ansible tasks through `sudo su -` using password auth

- Feature Pull Request

sudosu

So I have been using this at various customers for bootstrapping Ansible mostly.

Often you have an existing setup where there is a user that has root-access enabled through sudo, but only to run `su` to log using the user's password.
In these specific cases the root password is unique to the system and therefore not an easy way to automate bootstrapping.

Having a `sudo su -` become option **with password prompt** is not possible with the existing become methods (neither sudo nor su can be used) by abusing `become_exe` or `become_flags`.

This fixes ansible/ansible#12686

* Fix all reported issues

* Add unit tests

* Apply suggestions from code review

* Update plugins/become/sudosu.py

Co-authored-by: Felix Fontein <felix@fontein.de>

* Update tests/unit/plugins/become/test_sudosu.py

Co-authored-by: Felix Fontein <felix@fontein.de>

* Update tests/unit/plugins/become/test_sudosu.py

Co-authored-by: Felix Fontein <felix@fontein.de>

Co-authored-by: Felix Fontein <felix@fontein.de>
2021-03-24 17:20:26 +01:00