This might be a stupid question, but hear me out.
I regularly document steps to install various software for myself on my wiki
More recently, I managed to use different custom text in the source markdown to prepend #
and automatically, so commands can be copied more easily while still clarifying if it should be run as a normal user or as root.
Run command as user
$ some cool command
Run command as root/superuser with sudo
# some dangerous command
I usually remove and sudo
and use the # prefix. However, in some cases, the sudo
actually does something different that needs to be highlighted. For example, I might use it to execute a command as the user www-data
sudo -u www-data cp /var/www/html/html1 /var/www/html/html2
I often use as a prefix, but
#
would also make sense.
How would you prefix that line?
#
is a standard shell prompt for root, and only for root. For commands executed by any other user, including sudo, use$
.In general it is a bad practice to use
sudo
in documentation because in many distros it is not available by default. I would usesu
for your example. However system users have no passwords, so you need to become root first, and only after that change user to avoid prompting a password. So I would write# su -s /bin/bash www-data $ cp /var/www/html/html1 /var/www/html/html2
or
# su -s /bin/sh -c 'cp /var/www/html/html1 /var/www/html/html2' www-data
But if you are sure that
sudo
is installed and configured on a user’s machine, you may write$ sudo -u www-data cp /var/www/html/html1 /var/www/html/html2
Agreed that it’s bad practice to use
sudo
.Very good idea using
su
. I never thought of using it like that before.I disagree completely.
The bad practice is running commands directly as root. It’s fine if you prefer for your own environment but sudo is the best practice.
Additionally, which distro doesn’t have sudo? I’m sure there are some but by far the majority of distos have and use sudo.
Bad practice is not using sudo (I do use it), but assuming that everyone has sudo installed and configured the same way as you have.
Almost all distros have sudo. But many of them don’t install it by default. Most popular distros except Ubuntu (I mean Debian, Fedora and RHEL clones) provide a choice to user at install time: set the root password or install sudo and enable it for the admin user. In OpenSUSE sudo is installed by default, however it is configured in slightly different way than usually. Etc., etc.