This is a text-only version of the following page on https://raymii.org: --- Title : Ansible - sudoers safety and sanity checking in playbook Author : Remy van Elst Date : 23-03-2013 URL : https://raymii.org/s/tutorials/Ansible_-_Sudo_Safety_and_Sanity_Checks.html Format : Markdown/HTML --- Using Ansible to manage the /etc/sudoers file is fine, except when you have a syntax error in your template. This method helps you to only deploy a correct sudoers file. <p class="ad"> <b>Recently I removed all Google Ads from this site due to their invasive tracking, as well as Google Analytics. Please, if you found this content useful, consider a small donation using any of the options below:</b><br><br> <a href="https://leafnode.nl">I'm developing an open source monitoring app called Leaf Node Monitoring, for windows, linux & android. Go check it out!</a><br><br> <a href="https://github.com/sponsors/RaymiiOrg/">Consider sponsoring me on Github. It means the world to me if you show your appreciation and you'll help pay the server costs.</a><br><br> <a href="https://www.digitalocean.com/?refcode=7435ae6b8212">You can also sponsor me by getting a Digital Ocean VPS. With this referral link you'll get $100 credit for 60 days. </a><br><br> </p> I manage the `sudo` config (`/etc/sudoers/`) via Ansible. My sudo playbook creates an admin group, adds me to that admin group, and sets some variables in `/etc/sudoers/`. I do not have a sudoers template file, because I created the playbook at a client which has various different sudoers files, which they do not want to have changed ,because of different nagios checks that needed sudo on different hosts. However, if you start of clean, then a template file for `/etc/sudoers` is the best choice. This is the playbook: --- - hosts: all sudo: True user: remy connection: ssh # or paramiko vars: distro: {{ ansible_distribution }} pkg_mgr: {{ ansible_pkg_mgr }} pbname: {{ inventory_hostname }} tasks: - name: Copy sudoers file for safety command: cp -f /etc/sudoers /etc/sudoers.tmp - name: Create sudoers file backup command: cp -f /etc/sudoers /etc/sudoers.bak - name: Create admins group group: name=admins system=yes state=present - name: make sure we can sudo as admin group lineinfile: dest=/etc/sudoers.tmp state=present regexp='^%admin' line='%admin ALL=(ALL) ALL' - name: also make sure ssh-agent works via sudo lineinfile: dest=/etc/sudoers.tmp state=present regexp='^Defaults env_keep\+\=SSH_AUTH_SOCK' line='Defaults env_keep+=SSH_AUTH_SOCK' - name: Final sudoers file check shell: visudo -q -c -f /etc/sudoers.tmp && cp -f /etc/sudoers.tmp /etc/sudoers * We create the `admins` group, to which all users that need sudo are added by other playbooks. * We copy the remote sudoers file to a temp one and perform all actions on the temp sudoers file. We also back up the sudoers file. * We enable the `admins` group to sudo * We make sure `ssh-agent` works via sudo. This was used for a git repository on the root user account, to show our own names in the commits. * Finally we use `visudo` to check if the file is correct, and if so we copy the file over the "original" sudos file. By using the temp file we make sure we don't have any syntax errors and lock ourselves out of machines, needing to use ILO/DRAC to reset passwords and such. Been there, done that, not funny at all. [1]: https://www.digitalocean.com/?refcode=7435ae6b8212 --- License: All the text on this website is free as in freedom unless stated otherwise. This means you can use it in any way you want, you can copy it, change it the way you like and republish it, as long as you release the (modified) content under the same license to give others the same freedoms you've got and place my name and a link to this site with the article as source. 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