Software:doas

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Short description: Computer software

doas
Original author(s)Ted Unangst
Developer(s)OpenBSD Project[1]
Initial release18 October 2015; 8 years ago (2015-10-18)[1]
Stable release
[2] / Error: first parameter is missing. ()
Written inC
TypeSecurity software
LicenseISC license
Websitehttps://man.openbsd.org/doas

doas (“dedicated openbsd application subexecutor”)[3] is a program to execute commands as another user. The system administrator can configure it to give specified users privileges to execute specified commands. It is free and open-source under the ISC license[4] and available in Unix and Unix-like operating systems.

doas was developed by Ted Unangst for OpenBSD as a simpler and safer sudo replacement.[5][6] Unangst himself had issues with the default sudo config, which was his motivation to develop doas.[3]

doas was originally developed by Ted Unangst[7] and was released with OpenBSD 5.8 in October 2015 replacing sudo.[1] However, OpenBSD still provides sudo as a package.[1]

Configuration

Definition of privileges should be written in the configuration file, /etc/doas.conf.[8] The syntax used in the configuration file is inspired by the packet filter configuration file.[3]

Examples

Allow user1 to execute procmap as root without password:[citation needed]

permit nopass user1 as root cmd /usr/sbin/procmap

Allow members of the wheel group to run any command as root:

permit :wheel as root

Simpler version (only works if default user is root, which it is after install):

permit :wheel

To allow members of wheel group to run any command (default as root) and remember that they entered the password:

permit persist :wheel

Ports and availability

Jesse Smith’s[9] port of doas is packaged for DragonFlyBSD,[10] FreeBSD,[11] and NetBSD.[12] According to the author, it also works on illumos and macOS.[13] OpenDoas, a Linux port, is packaged for Debian, Alpine, Arch, CRUX, Fedora, Gentoo, GNU Guix, Hyperbola, Manjaro, Parabola, NixOS, Ubuntu, and Void Linux.[14] Starting with Alpine Linux v3.16 release, OpenDoas became the suggested replacement for sudo, which got its security maintenance time reduced within the distribution.[15]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "OpenBSD 5.8". http://www.openbsd.org/58.html. 
  2. "src/usr.bin/doas/doas.c - view - 1.98". 2022-12-22. https://cvsweb.openbsd.org/src/usr.bin/doas/doas.c?rev=1.98. Retrieved 2023-07-22. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 "doas - dedicated openbsd application subexecutor". https://flak.tedunangst.com/post/doas. 
  4. "Archived copy". https://cvsweb.openbsd.org/src/usr.bin/doas/doas.c?rev=1.82. 
  5. Yegulalp, Serdar (2016-07-25). "OpenBSD 6.0 tightens security by losing Linux compatibility" (in en). https://www.infoworld.com/article/3099038/openbsd-60-tightens-security-by-losing-linux-compatibility.html. 
  6. Millman, Rene (18 October 2019). "Linux Sudo bug could allow hackers root access". SC Media UK. https://www.scmagazineuk.com/article/1663022. 
  7. doas(1) – OpenBSD General Commands Manual
  8. "Privileges | OpenBSD Handbook". https://www.openbsdhandbook.com/system_management/privileges/. 
  9. "Slicer69 (Jesse Smith) · GitHub". https://github.com/slicer69. 
  10. "DPorts/Security/Doas at master · DragonFlyBSD/DPorts · GitHub". https://github.com/DragonFlyBSD/DPorts/tree/master/security/doas. 
  11. "[ports] Log of /Head/Security/Doas/PKG-descr". https://svnweb.freebsd.org/ports/head/security/doas/pkg-descr. 
  12. "The NetBSD Packages Collection: security/doas". http://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/pkgsrc/current/pkgsrc/security/doas/README.html. 
  13. Smith, Jesse. "doas". https://github.com/slicer69/doas. 
  14. "opendoas". https://repology.org/project/opendoas/information. 
  15. "Alpine 3.16.0 released". https://alpinelinux.org/posts/Alpine-3.16.0-released.html.