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Recipe 5.15 Killing Processes via sudo5.15.1 ProblemAllow a user to kill a certain process but no others. 5.15.2 SolutionCreate a script that kills the process by looking up its PID dynamically and safely. Add the script to /etc/sudoers. 5.15.3 DiscussionBecause we don't know a process's PID until runtime, we cannot solve this problem with /etc/sudoers alone, which is written before runtime. You need a script to deduce the PID for killing. For example, to let users restart sshd : #!/bin/sh pidfile=/var/run/sshd.pid sshd=/usr/sbin/sshd # sanity check that pid is numeric pid=`/usr/bin/perl -ne 'print if /^\d+$/; last;' $pidfile` if [ -z "$pid" ] then echo "$0: error: non-numeric pid $pid found in $pidfile" 1>&2 exit 1 fi # sanity check that pid is a running process if [ ! -d "/proc/$pid" ] then echo "$0: no such process" 1>&2 exit 1 fi # sanity check that pid is sshd if [ `readlink "/proc/$pid/exe"` != "$sshd" ] then echo "$0: error: attempt to kill non-sshd process" 1>&2 exit 1 fi kill -HUP "$pid" Call the script /usr/local/bin/sshd-restart and let users invoke it via sudo: # /etc/sudoers: smith ALL = /usr/local/bin/sshd-restart "" The empty double-quotes prevent arguments from being passed to the script. [Recipe 5.9] Our script carefully signals only the parent sshd process, not its child processes for SSH sessions already in progress. If you prefer to kill all processes with a given name, use the pidof command: # kill -USR1 `pidof mycommand` or the skill command: # skill -USR1 mycommand 5.15.4 See Alsokill(1), proc(5), pidof(8), skill(1), readlink(1). |
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