sudo su
interactive non-login shell.sudo su -
It is a login shell
To explain this you need to know what the programs do:
su
- The commandsu
is used to switch to another user (s witch u ser), but you can also switch to the root user by invoking the command with no parameter.su
asks you for the password of the user to switch, after typing the password you switched to the user's environment.sudo
-sudo
is meant to run a single command with root privileges. But unlikesu
it prompts you for the password of the current user. This user must be in the sudoers file (or a group that is in the sudoers file). By default, Ubuntu "remembers" your password for 15 minutes, so that you don't have to type your password every time.bash
- A text-interface to interact with the computer. It's important to understand the difference between login, non-login, interactive and non-interactive shells:
Types of shells:
- login shell: A login shell logs you into the system as a specified user, necessary for this is a username and password. When you hit ctrl+alt+F1 to login into a virtual terminal you get after successful login a login shell.
- non-login shell: A shell that is executed without logging in, necessary for this is a currently logged-in user. When you open a graphic terminal in gnome it is a non-login shell.
- interactive shell: A shell (login or non-login) where you can interactively type or interrupt commands. For example a gnome terminal.
- non-interactive shell: A (sub)shell that is probably run from an automated process. You will see neither input nor output.
So the cases are:
sudo su
Callssudo
with the commandsu
. Bash is called as interactive non-login shell. So bash only executes.bashrc
. You can see that after switching to root you are still in the same directory:user@host:~$ sudo su root@host:/home/user#
sudo su -
This time it is a login shell, so/etc/profile
,.profile
and.bashrc
are executed and you will find yourself in root's home directory with root's environment.sudo -i
It is nearly the same assudo su -
The -i (simulate initial login) option runs the shell specified by the password database entry of the target user as a login shell. This means that login-specific resource files such as.profile
,.bashrc
or.login
will be read and executed by the shell.sudo /bin/bash
This means that you callsudo
with the command/bin/bash
./bin/bash
is started as non-login shell so all the dot-files are not executed, but bash itself reads.bashrc
of the calling user. Your environment stays the same. Your home will not be root's home. So you are root, but in the environment of the calling user.sudo -s
reads the$SHELL
variable and executes the content. If$SHELL
contains/bin/bash
it invokessudo /bin/bash
(see above).
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