I would like to set a specific command to not require sudo privileges, is there a way to accomplish this? I know you can add commands to the sudoer file to allow certain commands to be used by non root accounts, so maybe there is something similar for adding commands to allow regular users to use?
What the line I listed will do will let a specific user have permission to use sudo without a password to run
wg
as root without a password. So they (and not other users) can type:And the command will run as the root user, without them being prompted to enter a password.
It doesn’t mean that when that user runs:
In their shell, what will actually run is:
If you also want to avoid typing the extra characters, you can set up an alias in your shell.
I don’t know what shell you’re using, but most Linux systems use
bash
as a default:If you’re using bash, you can tell your current bash shell invocation to do that with the
alias
command:If you want that command run in every bash shell you invoke, you can do so by editing
~/.bashrc
and adding the line:Awesome now I understand what you and the other commenter were talking about with aliasing. Well this works perfect without the alias, many thanks