From ae581a19fbe896a797450b9d9573fb66f2735227 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Sun, 7 Apr 2024 16:37:38 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 1.9.13p3. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- docs/UPGRADE.md | 604 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 604 insertions(+) create mode 100644 docs/UPGRADE.md (limited to 'docs/UPGRADE.md') diff --git a/docs/UPGRADE.md b/docs/UPGRADE.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..43a315a --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/UPGRADE.md @@ -0,0 +1,604 @@ +Notes on upgrading from an older release +======================================== + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.9.13: + + Sudo now builds AIX-style shared libraries and dynamic shared + objects by default instead of svr4-style. This means that the + default sudo plugins are now .a (archive) files that contain a + .so shared object file instead of bare .so files. This was done + to improve compatibility with the AIX Freeware ecosystem, + specifically, the AIX Freeware build of OpenSSL. When loading + a .a file as a plugin the name of the included .so file must + also be specified, for example /usr/libexec/sudo/sudoers.a(sudoers.so). + + Sudo is still capable of loading svr4-style .so plugins and if + a .so file is requested, either via sudo.conf or the sudoers + file, and only the .a file is present, sudo will convert the + path from plugin.so to plugin.a(plugin.so). This ensures + compatibility with existing configurations. To restore the old, + pre-1.9.13 behavior, run configure using the --with-aix-soname=svr4 + option. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.9.10: + + Sudo now interprets a command line argument in sudoers that + begins with a '^' character as a regular expression. To start + a command argument with a literal '^' character, it must be + escaped with a backslash ('\'). This may result in a syntax + error after upgrading for existing sudoers rules where the command + line arguments begin with a '^'. + + A user may now only run "sudo -U otheruser -l" if they have a + "sudo ALL" privilege where the RunAs user contains either "root" + or "otheruser". Previously, having "sudo ALL" was sufficient, + regardless of the RunAs user. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.9.9: + + Sudo now runs commands with the core limit resource limit set + to 0 by default. While most operating systems restrict core + dumps of set-user-ID programs like sudo, this protection is + lost when sudo executes a command. By disabling core dumps by + default, it is possible to avoid potential security problems + such as those seen with the Linux logrotate utility, which could + interpret a core dump as a valid configuration file. + + To restore the historic core dump file size behavior, add the + following line to the sudoers file: + + Defaults rlimit_core=default + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.9.7: + + Sudo now links with OpenSSL 1.0.1 or higher by default if it + is present on the system unless it is explicitly disabled (via + `--disable-openssl`), or unless the sudo log client and server + code is disabled (via `--disable-log-client` and `--disable-log-server`). + As a result, the sudo log server (and the client built into the + sudoers plugin) now support TLS connections by default. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.9.3: + + Due to the addition of the CHROOT and CWD options, it is no + longer possible to declare an alias with one of those names. + If a sudoers file has an alias with one of those names, sudo + and visudo will report a syntax error with a message like + "syntax error: unexpected CHROOT, expecting ALIAS". + + Starting with version 1.9.3, sudoers rules must end in either + a newline or the end-of-file. This makes it possible to provide + better error messages. Previously, it was possible to include + multiple rules on a single line, separated by white space. + + Starting with version 1.9.3, sudo will attempt to recover from + a syntax error in the sudoers file by discarding the portion + of the line that contains the error until the end of the line. + To restore the historic behavior of refusing to run when a + syntax error is encountered, add `error_recovery=false` as a + plugin option in sudo.conf for the "sudoers_audit" plugin, (or + "sudoers_policy" if there is no "sudoers_audit" plugin configured). + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.9.1: + + Starting with version 1.9.1, sudoers plugin arguments in sudo.conf + should be specified for the "sudoers_audit" plugin, not + "sudoers_policy". This is because the sudoers file is now + opened and parsed by the "sudoers_audit" plugin. Previously, + this was done by the "sudoers_policy" plugin. The use of an + audit plugin makes it possible for the sudoers module to detect + when a command has been rejected by an approval plugin and only + log commands that are allowed by both policy and approval + plugins. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.8.30: + + Starting with version 1.8.30, sudo will no longer allow commands + to be run as a user or group ID that is not in the password or + group databases by default. Previously, sudo would always allow + unknown user or group IDs if the sudoers entry permitted it, + including via the _ALL_ alias. The old behavior can be restored + by setting the new "allow_unknown_runas_id" Defaults setting + in the sudoers file. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.8.29: + + Starting with version 1.8.29, if the umask is explicitly set + in sudoers, that value is used regardless of the umask specified + by PAM or login.conf. However, if the umask is not explicitly + set in sudoers, PAM, or login.conf may now override the default + sudoers umask. Previously, the sudoers umask always overrode + the umask set by PAM, which was not the documented behavior. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.8.28: + + Starting with version 1.8.28, sudo stores the signal that caused + a command to be suspended or resumed as a string in the I/O log + timing file. The version of sudoreplay included with sudo + 1.8.28 can process either type of I/O log file but older versions + of sudoreplay are unable to replay the newer logs. + + Starting with version 1.8.28, sudoedit honors the umask and + umask_override settings in sudoers. Previously, the user's + umask was used as-is. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.8.26: + + Starting with version 1.8.26, sudo no long sets the USERNAME + environment variable when running commands. This is a non-standard + environment variable that was set on some older Linux systems. + Sudo still sets the LOGNAME, USER, and, on AIX systems, LOGIN + environment variables. + + Handling of the LOGNAME, USER (and on AIX, LOGIN) environment + variables has changed slightly in version 1.8.26. Sudo now + treats those variables as a single unit. This means that if + one variable is preserved or removed from the environment using + env_keep, env_check, or env_delete, the others are too. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.8.23: + + In sudo 1.8.23 the "sudoers2ldif" script and the `visudo -x` + functionality has been superseded by the "cvtsudoers" utility. + The cvtsudoers utility is intended to be a drop-in replacement + for "sudoers2ldif". Because it uses the same parser as sudo + and visudo, cvtsudoers can perform a more accurate conversion + than sudoers2ldif could. + + To convert a sudoers file to JSON, the format option must be + specified. For example, instead of: + + visudo -f sudoers_file -x output_file + + one would use: + + cvtsudoers -f json -o output_file sudoers_file + + Unlike "visudo -x", "cvtsudoers" reads from the standard input + by default. Also, the base DN may be specified on the command + line, if desired, using the -b option. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.8.20: + + Due to the addition of the TIMEOUT, NOTBEFORE, and NOTAFTTER + options, it is no longer possible to declare an alias with one + of those names. If a sudoers file has an alias with one of + those names, sudo, and visudo will report a syntax error with a + message like "syntax error: unexpected TIMEOUT, expecting ALIAS". + + Starting with version 1.9.3, sudoers rules must end in either + Prior to version 1.8.20, when log_input, log_output, or use_pty + were enabled, if any of the standard input, output, or error + were not connected to a terminal, sudo would use a pipe. The + pipe allows sudo to interpose itself between the old standard + input, output, or error and log the contents. Beginning with + version 1.8.20, a pipe is only used when I/O logging is enabled. + If use_pty is set without log_input or log_output, no pipe will + be used. Additionally, if log_input is set without log_output, + a pipe is only used for the standard input. Likewise, if + log_output is set without log_input, a pipe is only used for + the standard output and standard error. This results in a + noticeable change in behavior if the use_pty flag is set and no + terminal is present when running commands such as scripts that + execute other commands asynchronously (in the background). + Previously, sudo would exit immediately, causing background + commands to terminate with a broken pipe if they attempt to + write to the standard output or standard error. As of version + 1.8.20, a pipe will not be used in this case so the command + will no longer be terminated. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.8.16: + + When editing files with sudoedit, files in a directory that is + writable by the invoking user may no longer be edited by default. + Also, sudoedit will refuse to follow a symbolic link in the + path to be edited if that directory containing the link is + writable by the user. This behavior can be disabled by negating + the sudoedit_checkdir sudoers option, which is now enabled by + default. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.8.15: + + Prior to version 1.8.15, when env_reset was enabled (the default) + and the -s option was not used, the SHELL environment variable + was set to the shell of the invoking user. In 1.8.15 and above, + when env_reset is enabled and the -s option is not used, SHELL + is set based on the target user. + + When editing files with sudoedit, symbolic links will no longer + be followed by default. The old behavior can be restored by + enabling the sudoedit_follow option in sudoers or on a per-command + basis with the FOLLOW and NOFOLLOW tags. + + Prior to version 1.8.15, groups listed in sudoers that were not + found in the system group database were passed to the group + plugin, if any. Starting with 1.8.15, only groups of the form + %:group are resolved via the group plugin by default. The old + behavior can be restored by using the always_query_group_plugin + sudoers option. + + Locking of the time stamp file has changed in sudo 1.8.15. + Previously, the user's entire time stamp file was locked while + retrieving and updating a time stamp record. Now, only a single + record, specific to the tty or parent process ID, is locked. + This lock is held while the user enters their password. If + sudo is suspended at the password prompt (or run in the + background), the lock is dropped until sudo is resumed, at which + point it will be reacquired. This allows sudo to be used in a + pipeline even when a password is required--only one instance + of sudo will prompt for a password. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.8.14: + + On HP-UX, sudo will no longer check for "plugin.sl" if "plugin.so" + is specified but does not exist. This was a temporary hack for + backward compatibility with Sudo 1.8.6 and below when the + plugin path name was not listed in sudo.conf. A plugin path + name that explicitly ends in ".sl" will still work as expected. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.8.12: + + On Solaris, sudo is now able to determine the NIS domain name. + As a result, if you had previously been using netgroups that + do not include the domain, you will need to either set the + domain in the entry or leave the domain part of the tuple blank. + + For example, the following will no longer work: + + my-hosts (foo,-,-) (bar,-,-) (baz,-,-) + + and should be changed to: + + my-hosts (foo,-,) (bar,-,) (baz,-,) + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.8.10: + + The time stamp file format has changed in sudo 1.8.10. There + is now a single time stamp file for each user, even when tty-based + time stamps are used. Each time stamp file may contain multiple + records to support tty-based time stamps as well as multiple + authentication users. On systems that support it, monotonic + time is stored instead of wall clock time. As a result, it is + important that the time stamp files not persist when the system + reboots. For this reason, the default location for the time + stamp files has changed back to a directory located in `/var/run`. + Systems that do not have `/var/run` (e.g. AIX) or that do not clear + it on boot (e.g. HP-UX) will need to clear the time stamp + directory via a start up script. Such a script is installed by + default on AIX and HP-UX systems. + + Because there is now a single time stamp file per user, the -K + option will remove all of the user's time stamps, not just the + time stamp for the current terminal. + + Lecture status is now stored separately from the time stamps in a + separate directory: `/var/db/sudo/lectured`, `/var/lib/sudo/lectured` + or `/var/adm/sudo/lectured` depending on what is present on the system. + + LDAP-based sudoers now uses a default search filter of + (objectClass=sudoRole) for more efficient queries. It is + possible to disable the default search filter by specifying + SUDOERS_SEARCH_FILTER in ldap.conf but omitting a value. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.8.7: + + Sudo now stores its libexec files in a "sudo" sub-directory + instead of in libexec itself. For backward compatibility, if + the plugin is not found in the default plugin directory, sudo + will check the parent directory default directory ends in `/sudo`. + + The default sudo plugins now all use the .so extension, regardless + of the extension used by system shared libraries. For backward + compatibility, sudo on HP-UX will also search for a plugin with + an .sl extension if the .so version is not found. + + Handling of users belonging to a large number of groups has + changed. Previously, sudo would only use the group list from + the kernel unless the system_group plugin was enabled in sudoers. + Now, sudo will query the groups database if the user belongs + to the maximum number of groups supported by the kernel. See + the group_source and max_groups settings in the sudo.conf manual + for details. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.8.2: + + When matching Unix groups in the sudoers file, sudo will now + match based on the name of the group as it appears in sudoers + instead of the group-ID. This can substantially reduce the + number of group lookups for sudoers files that contain a large + number of groups. There are a few side effects of this change. + + 1) Unix groups with different names but the same group-ID are + can no longer be used interchangeably. Sudo will look up all + of a user's groups by group-ID and use the resulting group + names when matching sudoers entries. If there are multiple + groups with the same ID, the group name returned by the + system getgrgid() library function is the name that will be + used when matching sudoers entries. + + 2) Unix group names specified in the sudoers file that are + longer than the system maximum will no longer match. For + instance, if there is a Unix group "fireflie" on a system + where group names are limited to eight characters, "%fireflies" + in sudoers will no longer match "fireflie". Previously, a + lookup by name of the group "fireflies" would have matched + the "fireflie" group on most systems. + + The legacy group matching behavior may be restored by enabling + the match_group_by_gid Defaults option in sudoers available + in sudo 1.8.18 and higher. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.8.1: + + Changes in the sudoers parser could result in parse errors for + existing sudoers file. These changes cause certain erroneous + entries to be flagged as errors where before they allowed. + Changes include: + + Combining multiple Defaults entries with a backslash. E.g. + + Defaults set_path \ + Defaults syslog + + which should be: + + Defaults set_path + Defaults syslog + + Also, double-quoted strings with a missing end-quote are now + detected and result in an error. Previously, text starting a + double quote and ending with a newline was ignored. E.g. + + Defaults set_path"foo + + In previous versions of sudo, the _"foo_ portion would have + been ignored. + + To avoid problems, sudo 1.8.1's `make install` will not install + a new sudo binary if the existing sudoers file has errors. + + In Sudo 1.8.1 the _noexec_ functionality has moved out of the + sudoers policy plugin and into the sudo front-end. As a result, + the path to the noexec file is now specified in the sudo.conf + file instead of the sudoers file. If you have a sudoers file + that uses the "noexec_file" option, you will need to move the + definition to the sudo.conf file instead. + + Old style in `/etc/sudoers`: + + Defaults noexec_file=/usr/local/libexec/sudo_noexec.so + + New style in `/etc/sudo.conf`: + + Path noexec /usr/local/libexec/sudo_noexec.so + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.8.0: + + Starting with version 1.8.0, sudo uses a modular framework to + support policy and I/O logging plugins. The default policy + plugin is "sudoers" which provides the traditional sudoers + evaluation and I/O logging. Plugins are typically located in + `/usr/libexec` or `/usr/local/libexec`, though this is system-dependent. + The sudoers plugin is named "sudoers.so" on most systems. + + The sudo.conf file, usually stored in `/etc`, is used to configure + plugins. This file is optional--if no plugins are specified + in sudo.conf, the "sudoers" plugin is used. See the example + sudo.conf file in the docs directory or refer to the updated + sudo manual to see how to configure sudo.conf. + + The "askpass" setting has moved from the sudoers file to the + sudo.conf file. If you have a sudoers file that uses the + "askpass" option, you will need to move the definition to the + sudo.conf file. + + Old style in `/etc/sudoers`: + + Defaults askpass=/usr/X11R6/bin/ssh-askpass + + New style in `/etc/sudo.conf`: + + Path askpass /usr/X11R6/bin/ssh-askpass + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.7.5: + + Sudo 1.7.5 includes an updated LDAP schema with support for + the sudoNotBefore, sudoNotAfter, and sudoOrder attributes. + + The sudoNotBefore and sudoNotAfter attribute support is only + used when the SUDOERS_TIMED setting is enabled in ldap.conf. + If enabled, those attributes are used directly when constructing + an LDAP filter. As a result, your LDAP server must have the + updated schema if you want to use sudoNotBefore and sudoNotAfter. + + The sudoOrder support does not affect the LDAP filter sudo + constructs and so there is no need to explicitly enable it in + ldap.conf. If the sudoOrder attribute is not present in an + entry, a value of 0 is used. If no entries contain sudoOrder + attributes, the results are in whatever order the LDAP server + returns them, as in past versions of sudo. + + Older versions of sudo will simply ignore the new attributes + if they are present in an entry. There are no compatibility + problems using the updated schema with older versions of sudo. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.7.4: + + Starting with sudo 1.7.4, the time stamp files have moved from + `/var/run/sudo` to either `/var/db/sudo`, `/var/lib/sudo`, or + `/var/adm/sudo`. The directories are checked for existence in + that order. This prevents users from receiving the sudo lecture + every time the system reboots. Time stamp files older than the + boot time are ignored on systems where it is possible to determine + this. + + Additionally, the tty_tickets sudoers option is now enabled by + default. To restore the old behavior (single time stamp per user), + add a line like: + + Defaults !tty_tickets + + to sudoers or use the `--without-tty-tickets` configure option. + + The HOME and MAIL environment variables are now reset based on the + target user's password database entry when the env_reset sudoers option + is enabled (which is the case in the default configuration). Users + wishing to preserve the original values should use a sudoers entry like: + + Defaults env_keep += HOME + + to preserve the old value of HOME and + + Defaults env_keep += MAIL + + to preserve the old value of MAIL. + + Preserving HOME has security implications since many programs + use it when searching for configuration files. Adding HOME to + env_keep may enable a user to run unrestricted commands via sudo. + + The default syslog facility has changed from "local2" to "authpriv" + (or "auth" if the operating system doesn't have "authpriv"). + The `--with-logfac` configure option can be used to change this + or it can be changed in the sudoers file. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.7.0: + + Starting with sudo 1.7.0, comments in the sudoers file must not + have a digit or minus sign immediately after the comment character + ('#'). Otherwise, the comment may be interpreted as a user or + group-ID. + + When sudo is build with LDAP support the `/etc/nsswitch.conf` file is + now used to determine the sudoers sea ch order. sudo will default to + only using `/etc/sudoers` unless `/etc/nsswitch.conf` says otherwise. + This can be changed with an nsswitch.conf line, e.g.: + + sudoers: ldap files + + Would case LDAP to be searched first, then the sudoers file. + To restore the pre-1.7.0 behavior, run configure with the + `--with-nsswitch=no` flag. + + Sudo now ignores user .ldaprc files as well as system LDAP defaults. + All LDAP configuration is now in `/etc/ldap.conf` (or whichever file + was specified by configure's `--with-ldap-conf-file` option). + If you are using TLS, you may now need to specify: + + tls_checkpeer no + + in sudo's ldap.conf unless ldap.conf references a valid certificate + authority file(s). + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.6.9: + + Starting with sudo 1.6.9, if an OS supports a modular authentication + method such as PAM, it will be used by default by configure. + + Environment variable handling has changed significantly in sudo + 1.6.9. Prior to version 1.6.9, sudo would preserve the user's + environment, pruning out potentially dangerous variables. + Beginning with sudo 1.6.9, the environment is reset to a default + set of values with only a small number of "safe" variables + preserved. To preserve specific environment variables, add + them to the "env_keep" list in sudoers. E.g. + + Defaults env_keep += "EDITOR" + + The old behavior can be restored by negating the "env_reset" + option in sudoers. E.g. + + Defaults !env_reset + + There have also been changes to how the "env_keep" and + "env_check" options behave. + + Prior to sudo 1.6.9, the TERM and PATH environment variables + would always be preserved even if the env_keep option was + redefined. That is no longer the case. Consequently, if + env_keep is set with "=" and not simply appended to (i.e. using + "+="), PATH and TERM must be explicitly included in the list + of environment variables to keep. The LOGNAME, SHELL, USER, + and USERNAME environment variables are still always set. + + Additionally, the env_check setting previously had no effect + when env_reset was set (which is now on by default). Starting + with sudo 1.6.9, environment variables listed in env_check are + also preserved in the env_reset case, provided that they do not + contain a '/' or '%' character. It is not necessary to also + list a variable in env_keep--having it in env_check is sufficient. + + The default lists of variables to be preserved and/or checked + are displayed when sudo is run by root with the -V flag. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.6.8: + + Prior to sudo 1.6.8, if `/var/run` did not exist, sudo would put + the time stamp files in `/tmp/.odus`. As of sudo 1.6.8, the + time stamp files will be placed in `/var/adm/sudo` or `/usr/adm/sudo` + if there is no `/var/run directory`. This directory will be + created if it does not already exist. + + Previously, a sudoers entry that explicitly prohibited running + a command as a certain user did not override a previous entry + allowing the same command. This has been fixed in sudo 1.6.8 + such that the last match is now used (as it is documented). + Hopefully no one was depending on the previous (buggy) behavior. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.6: + + As of sudo 1.6, parsing of runas entries and the NOPASSWD tag + has changed. Prior to 1.6, a runas specifier applied only to + a single command directly following it. Likewise, the NOPASSWD + tag only allowed the command directly following it to be run + without a password. Starting with sudo 1.6, both the runas + specifier and the NOPASSWD tag are "sticky" for an entire + command list. So, given the following line in sudo < 1.6 + + millert ALL=(daemon) NOPASSWD:/usr/bin/whoami,/bin/ls + + millert would be able to run `/usr/bin/whoami` as user daemon + without a password and `/bin/ls` as root with a password. + + As of sudo 1.6, the same line now means that millert is able + to run run both `/usr/bin/whoami` and `/bin/ls` as user daemon + without a password. To expand on this, take the following + example: + + millert ALL=(daemon) NOPASSWD:/usr/bin/whoami, (root) /bin/ls, \ + /sbin/dump + + millert can run `/usr/bin/whoami` as daemon and `/bin/ls` and + `/sbin/dump` as root. No password need be given for either + command. In other words, the "(root)" sets the default runas + user to root for the rest of the list. If we wanted to require + a password for `/bin/ls` and `/sbin/dump` the line could be written + as: + + millert ALL=(daemon) NOPASSWD:/usr/bin/whoami, \ + (root) PASSWD:/bin/ls, /sbin/dump + + Additionally, sudo now uses a per-user time stamp directory + instead of a time stamp file. This allows tty time stamps to + simply be files within the user's time stamp dir. For the + default, non-tty case, the time stamp on the directory itself + is used. + + Also, the temporary file used by visudo is now `/etc/sudoers.tmp` + since some versions of vipw on systems with shadow passwords use + `/etc/stmp` for the temporary shadow file. + + * Upgrading from a version prior to 1.5: + + By default, sudo expects the sudoers file to be mode 0440 and + to be owned by user and group 0. This differs from version 1.4 + and below which expected the sudoers file to be mode 0400 and + to be owned by root. Doing a `make install` will set the sudoers + file to the new mode and group. If sudo encounters a sudoers + file with the old permissions it will attempt to update it to + the new scheme. You cannot, however, use a sudoers file with + the new permissions with an old sudo binary. It is suggested + that if have a means of distributing sudo you distribute the + new binaries first, then the new sudoers file (or you can leave + sudoers as is and sudo will fix the permissions itself as long + as sudoers is on a local file system). -- cgit v1.2.3