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Command: su | Section: 1 | Source: OpenBSD | File: su.1
SU(1) FreeBSD General Commands Manual SU(1)
NAME
su - substitute user identity
SYNOPSIS
su [-fKLlm] [-a auth-type] [-c login-class] [-s login-shell]
[login [shell-argument ...]]
DESCRIPTION
The su utility allows a user to run a shell with the user and group ID of
another user without having to log out and in as that other user. All of
the real, effective, and saved user and group IDs as well as all
supplementary group IDs are always set according to the target user. If
the target login name is not specified, "root" is used.
By default, the shell of the target login is invoked and the SHELL and
HOME environment variables are set according to the target login, whereas
the current working directory remains unchanged. If the target login has
a user ID of 0, LOGNAME and USER are preserved and PATH and the umask(2)
value are set according to login.conf(5); otherwise, LOGNAME and USER are
set to the target login and PATH and the umask(2) value are preserved.
The TERM environment variable is always preserved. The rest of the
environment remains unmodified by default.
The options are as follows:
- Same as the -l option (deprecated).
-a auth-type
Specify an authentication type such as "skey" or "radius".
-c login-class
Specify a login class. You may only override the default class
if you're already root.
-f If the invoked shell is csh(1), this option prevents it from
executing system or user startup files. For other shells, start
a regular shell instead of a login shell when the -l option is
used. Useful to skip reading shell initialization files.
-K This is shorthand for "su -a passwd", provided for backwards
compatibility.
-L Loop until a correct username and password combination is
entered, similar to login(1). Note that in this mode target
login must be specified explicitly, either on the command line or
interactively. Additionally, su will prompt for the password
even when invoked by root.
-l Simulate a full login. The shell of the target login is invoked
and the current working directory is changed to the home
directory of the target login. HOME, SHELL, LOGNAME, and USER
are set to the default values for the target login. PATH and the
umask(2) value are set according to login.conf(5). Except for
preserving TERM, the rest of the environment is discarded.
-m Leave the environment unmodified. The login shell of the
invoking user is started, and the current working directory is
not changed. As a security precaution, if the target user's
shell is a non-standard shell (as defined by getusershell(3)) and
the caller's real UID is non-zero, su will fail.
-s login-shell
Specify the path to an alternate login shell. You may only
override the shell if you're already root. This option will
override the shell even if the -m option is specified.
The -l and -m options are mutually exclusive; the last one specified
overrides any previous ones.
If shell arguments are provided on the command line, they are passed to
the login shell of the target login. This allows it to pass arbitrary
commands via the -c option as understood by most shells. Note that -c
usually expects a single argument only; you have to quote it when passing
multiple words.
If group 0 (normally "wheel") has users listed then only those users can
su to "root". It is not sufficient to change a user's /etc/passwd entry
to add them to the "wheel" group; they must explicitly be listed in
/etc/group. If no one is in the "wheel" group, it is ignored, and anyone
who knows the root password is permitted to su to "root".
ENVIRONMENT
The following list provides the values of environment variables in the
new shell that is started by su.
HOME The home directory of the target login, except that it remains
unchanged with -m.
LOGNAME The target login by default, but unchanged if the target login
has a UID of 0 or if -m is given.
PATH The search path. It remains unchanged by default, but is set
according to the target login if the target login has a UID of 0
or if -l is given.
PWD The current working directory. It remains unchanged by default,
but is set to the home directory of the target login with -l.
SHELL The new shell that is started. It is the shell of the target
login by default, but the shell of the invoking user with -m.
TERM The terminal type. It is always retained from the invoking
process.
USER Same as LOGNAME.
EXAMPLES
Run the command "makewhatis" as user "bin". You will be asked for bin's
password unless your real UID is 0.
$ su bin -c makewhatis
Same as above, but the target command consists of more than a single
word:
$ su bin -c 'makewhatis /usr/local/man'
Same as above, but the target command is run with the resource limits of
the login class "staff". Note that the first -c option applies to su
while the second is an argument to the shell.
$ su -c staff bin -c 'makewhatis /usr/local/man'
Pretend a login for user "foo":
$ su -l foo
Same as above, but use S/Key for authentication:
$ su -a skey -l foo
SEE ALSO
doas(1), login(1), setusercontext(3), group(5), login.conf(5), passwd(5),
environ(7)
HISTORY
A su command first appeared in Version 1 AT&T UNIX.
BUGS
The login name is not optional for root if there are shell arguments.
FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8 December 22, 2022 FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8