CVTSUDOERS
Section: User Commands (1)
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BSD mandoc
Sudo 1.9.5p2
NAME
cvtsudoers
- convert between sudoers file formats
SYNOPSIS
cvtsudoers
[-
ehMpV
]
[-
b dn
]
[-
c conf_file
]
[-
d deftypes
]
[-
f output_format
]
[-
i input_format
]
[-
I increment
]
[-
m filter
]
[-
o output_file
]
[-
O start_point
]
[-
P padding
]
[-
s sections
]
[
input_file
]
DESCRIPTION
cvtsudoers
can be used to convert between
sudoers
security policy file formats.
The default input format is sudoers.
The default output format is LDIF.
It is only possible to convert a
sudoers
file that is syntactically correct.
If no
input_file
is specified, or if it is
`-'
,
the policy is read from the standard input.
By default, the result is written to the standard output.
The options are as follows:
- -b dn , --base = dn
-
The base DN (distinguished name) that will be used when performing
LDAP queries.
Typically this is of the form
ou=SUDOers,dc=my-domain,dc=com
for the domain
my-domain.com
If this option is not specified, the value of the
SUDOERS_BASE
environment variable will be used instead.
Only necessary when converting to LDIF format.
- -c conf_file , --config = conf_file
-
Specify the path to the configuration file.
Defaults to
/etc/cvtsudoers.conf
- -d deftypes , --defaults = deftypes
-
Only convert
Defaults
entries of the specified types.
One or more
Defaults
types may be specified, separated by a comma
(`,'
)
The supported types are:
- all
-
All Defaults entries.
- global
-
Global Defaults entries that are applied regardless of
user, runas, host or command.
- user
-
Per-user Defaults entries.
- runas
-
Per-runas user Defaults entries.
- host
-
Per-host Defaults entries.
- command
-
Per-command Defaults entries.
See the
Defaults
section in
sudoers(5)
for more information.
If the
-d
option is not specified, all
Defaults
entries will be converted.
- -e , --expand-aliases
-
Expand aliases in
input_file
Aliases are preserved by default when the output
format
is JSON or sudoers.
- -f output_format , --output-format = output_format
-
Specify the output format (case-insensitive).
The following formats are supported:
- JSON
-
JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) files are usually easier for
third-party applications to consume than the traditional
sudoers
format.
The various values have explicit types which removes much of the
ambiguity of the
sudoers
format.
- LDIF
-
LDIF (LDAP Data Interchange Format) files can be imported into an LDAP
server for use with
sudoers.ldap5.
Conversion to LDIF has the following limitations:
-
Command, host, runas and user-specific Defaults lines cannot be
translated as they don't have an equivalent in the sudoers LDAP schema.
-
Command, host, runas and user aliases are not supported by the
sudoers LDAP schema so they are expanded during the conversion.
- sudoers
-
Traditional sudoers format.
A new sudoers file will be reconstructed from the parsed input file.
Comments are not preserved and data from any include files will be
output inline.
- -h , --help
-
Display a short help message to the standard output and exit.
- -i input_format , --input-format = input_format
-
Specify the input format.
The following formats are supported:
- LDIF
-
LDIF (LDAP Data Interchange Format) files can be exported from an LDAP
server to convert security policies used by
sudoers.ldap5.
If a base DN (distinguished name) is specified, only sudoRole objects
that match the base DN will be processed.
Not all sudoOptions specified in a sudoRole can be translated from
LDIF to sudoers format.
- sudoers
-
Traditional sudoers format.
This is the default input format.
- -I increment , --increment = increment
-
When generating LDIF output, increment each sudoOrder attribute by
the specified number.
Defaults to an increment of 1.
- -m filter , --match = filter
-
Only output rules that match the specified
filter
A
filter
expression is made up of one or more
key = value
pairs, separated by a comma
(`,'
)
The
key
may be
``user''
``group''
or
``host''
For example,
user = operator
or
host = www
An upper-case User_Alias or Host_Alias may be specified as the
``user''
or
``host''
A matching
sudoers
rule may also include users, groups and hosts that are not part of the
filter
This can happen when a rule includes multiple users, groups or hosts.
To prune out any non-matching user, group or host from the rules, the
-p
option may be used.
By default, the password and group databases are not consulted when matching
against the filter so the users and groups do not need to be present
on the local system (see the
-M
option).
Only aliases that are referenced by the filtered policy rules will
be displayed.
- -M , --match-local
-
When the
-m
option is also specified, use password and group database information
when matching users and groups in the filter.
Only users and groups in the filter that exist on the local system will match,
and a user's groups will automatically be added to the filter.
If the
-M
is
not
specified, users and groups in the filter do not need to exist on the
local system, but all groups used for matching must be explicitly listed
in the filter.
- -o output_file , --output = output_file
-
Write the converted output to
output_file
If no
output_file
is specified, or if it is
`-'
,
the converted
sudoers
policy will be written to the standard output.
- -O start_point , --order-start = start_point
-
When generating LDIF output, use the number specified by
start_point
in the sudoOrder attribute of the first sudoRole object.
Subsequent sudoRole object use a sudoOrder value generated by adding an
increment
see the
-I
option for details.
Defaults to a starting point of 1.
A starting point of 0 will disable the generation of sudoOrder
attributes in the resulting LDIF file.
- -p , --prune-matches
-
When the
-m
option is also specified,
cvtsudoers
will prune out non-matching users, groups and hosts from
matching entries.
- -P padding , --padding = padding
-
When generating LDIF output, construct the initial sudoOrder value by
concatenating
order_start
and
increment
padding the
increment
with zeros until it consists of
padding
digits.
For example, if
order_start
is 1027,
padding
is 3, and
increment
is 1, the value of sudoOrder for the first entry will be 1027000,
followed by 1027001, 1027002, etc.
If the number of sudoRole entries is larger than the padding would allow,
cvtsudoers
will exit with an error.
By default, no padding is performed.
- -s sections , --suppress = sections
-
Suppress the output of specific
sections
of the security policy.
One or more section names may be specified, separated by a comma
(`,'
)
The supported section name are:
defaults
aliases
and
privileges
(which may be shortened to
privs )
- -V , -version
-
Print the
cvtsudoers
and
sudoers
grammar versions and exit.
Options in the form
``keyword = value''
may also be specified in a configuration file,
/etc/cvtsudoers.conf
by default.
The following keywords are recognized:
- defaults = deftypes
-
See the description of the
-d
command line option.
- expand_aliases = yes | no
-
See the description of the
-e
command line option.
- input_format = ldif | sudoers
-
See the description of the
-i
command line option.
- match = filter
-
See the description of the
-m
command line option.
- order_increment = increment
-
See the description of the
-I
command line option.
- order_start = start_point
-
See the description of the
-O
command line option.
- output_format = json | ldif | sudoers
-
See the description of the
-f
command line option.
- padding = padding
-
See the description of the
-P
command line option.
- prune_matches = yes | no
-
See the description of the
-p
command line option.
- sudoers_base = dn
-
See the description of the
-b
command line option.
- suppress = sections
-
See the description of the
-s
command line option.
Options on the command line will override values from the
configuration file.
FILES
- /etc/cvtsudoers.conf
-
default configuration for cvtsudoers
EXAMPLES
Convert
/etc/sudoers
to LDIF (LDAP Data Interchange Format) where the
ldap.conf
file uses a
sudoers_base
of my-domain,dc=com, storing the result in
sudoers.ldif
$ cvtsudoers -b ou=SUDOers,dc=my-domain,dc=com -o sudoers.ldif \
/etc/sudoers
Convert
/etc/sudoers
to JSON format, storing the result in
sudoers.json
$ cvtsudoers -f json -o sudoers.json /etc/sudoers
Parse
/etc/sudoers
and display only rules that match user
ambrose
on host
hastur
$ cvtsudoers -f sudoers -m user=ambrose,host=hastur /etc/sudoers
Same as above, but expand aliases and prune out any non-matching
users and hosts from the expanded entries.
$ cvtsudoers -ep -f sudoers -m user=ambrose,host=hastur /etc/sudoers
Convert
sudoers.ldif
from LDIF to traditional
sudoers
format:
$ cvtsudoers -i ldif -f sudoers -o sudoers.new sudoers.ldif
SEE ALSO
sudoers(5),
sudoers.ldap5,
sudo(8)
AUTHORS
Many people have worked on
sudo
over the years; this version consists of code written primarily by:
An Todd C. Miller
See the CONTRIBUTORS file in the
sudo
distribution (https://www.sudo.ws/contributors.html) for an
exhaustive list of people who have contributed to
sudo
BUGS
If you feel you have found a bug in
,
please submit a bug report at
https://bugzilla.sudo.ws/
SUPPORT
Limited free support is available via the sudo-users mailing list,
see
https://www.sudo.ws/mailman/listinfo/sudo-users to subscribe or
search the archives.
DISCLAIMER
cvtsudoers
is provided
``AS IS''
and any express or implied warranties, including, but not limited
to, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a
particular purpose are disclaimed.
See the LICENSE file distributed with
sudo
or
https://www.sudo.ws/license.html for complete details.