GNU/Linux Desktop Survival Guide by Graham Williams |
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The aim of wajig is to operate as much as possible as a user command and to do super user privileged commands as necessary. The easiest way to do this is to use the sudo package which will ask you for your password and then run the command as the super user. If you don't have sudo installed then wajig will use `su' to run as super user, but you will need to enter the super user password frequently. If `sudo' is installed but not set up for you to access the appropriate apt-get commands you will see a permission denied message.
Installing sudo is straight forward. As root run the command visudo to edit the configration file. Add the lines:
Cmnd_Alias APT = /usr/bin/apt-get, /usr/bin/apt-cache, /usr/bin/dpkg, \ /usr/sbin/dpkg-reconfigure, /usr/bin/alien, \ /etc/init.d/*, /usr/sbin/update-alternatives, \ /usr/lib/apt-move/fetch, /usr/bin/dselect, \ |
and
kayon ALL=(ALL) APT |
in the appropriate places (it should be obvious looking at the file). The user kayon can then run apt-get and related commands as the super user.