--- title: "Hello doas" tags: ["Linux"] date: 2021-01-30T15:15:55-05:00 draft: false --- Today, I switched my workstation from `sudo` to `doas`. I'm running Void Linux, and the process was fairly easy. First, I needed to figure out how to remove `sudo` (yes, I realize I could have installed `doas` first, then removed `sudo`, but I decided to do it the hard way.) As it turns out, the [advanced usage section of the XBPS manual](https://docs.voidlinux.org/xbps/advanced-usage.html#ignoring-packages) details how to use the `ignorepkg` entry in xbps.d with nothing other than this exact use case! I created the file `/etc/xbps.d/20-ignorepkg-sudo.conf` with contents ``` ignorepkg=sudo ``` and then ran `sudo xbps-remove sudo` (an ironic command). After that, because I was stupid and removed `sudo` before I had set up `doas`, I had to use plain-old `su` to change to the root user and run `xi opendoas`. I also configured `doas` in `/etc/doas.conf` with the following: ``` # see doas.conf(5) for configuration details permit nopass keepenv :admin ``` I ran `groupadd admin`, `usermod -aG admin joel`, and then logged out so that my user account would see the new group perms. And just like that, I can now run `doas xbps-install ...` and all of my other commands, just substituting `doas` for `sudo`. The one thing I immediately missed was `sudoedit`. Before I accidentally tried to use `sudo` for the first time, I had already accidentally tried to run `sudoedit` *at least* 5 times. I had to fix this. I saw a discussion on Reddit where [one user suggested](https://www.reddit.com/r/linux/comments/l6y7nv/is_doas_a_good_alternative_to_sudo/gl4hs42?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3) writing a script to replace the `sudoedit` functionality. I quickly starting hacking together something like that. I started with: ``` #!/bin/sh mkdir -p /tmp/doasedit doas cp $1 /tmp/doasedit/tmp_file $EDITOR /tmp/doasedit/tmp_file ``` And quickly ran into my first road-block. The script is going to have to change the permissions of that file before the user can edit it. But if the script changes the permissions, how can I restore it to the original location with the right permissions? `cp /tmp/doasedit/tmp_file $1` won't work. I thought about just using cat to overwrite the file contents in-place (`cat /tmp/doasedit/tmp_file > $1`). That *could* create some issues if a program has the file open. Instead, a better option is to create two copies of the file--one for editing, and one for preserving file attributes: ``` #!/bin/sh mkdir -p /tmp/doasedit doas cp $1 /tmp/doasedit/edit doas chown -R $USER:$USER /tmp/doasedit/edit doas cp $1 /tmp/doasedit/file $EDITOR /tmp/doasedit/edit cat /tmp/doasedit/edit | doas tee /tmp/doasedit/file 1>/dev/null doas mv -f /tmp/doasedit/file $1 rm -rf /tmp/doasedit ``` Of course, the issue with this is that it only works with absolute paths. I want to make it work for relative paths as well. I'm going to take advantage of `realpath`, which is part of the `coreutils` package from Void. As a bonus, this will also take care of the edge case where the given file is a symlink (IIRC, `sudoedit` didn't follow symlinks, so I may be diverging here): ``` #!/bin/sh mkdir -p /tmp/doasedit srcfile="$(realpath $1)" doas cp $srcfile /tmp/doasedit/edit doas chown -R $USER:$USER /tmp/doasedit/edit doas cp $srcfile /tmp/doasedit/file $EDITOR /tmp/doasedit/edit cat /tmp/doasedit/edit | doas tee /tmp/doasedit/file 1>/dev/null doas mv -f /tmp/doasedit/file $srcfile rm -rf /tmp/doasedit ``` At this point, it works...okay-ish. It can only be used in one instance currently since I hard-coded `/tmp/doasedit/file` and `/tmp/doasedit/edit`, but that's easily fixed: ``` #!/bin/sh destfile_pfx="$(cat /dev/urandom | tr -cd 'a-f0-9' | head -c 32)" while [ -d "/tmp/doasedit/$destfile_pfx" ]; do destfile_pfx="$(cat /dev/urandom | tr -cd 'a-f0-9' | head -c 32)" done mkdir -p /tmp/doasedit/$destfile_pfx srcfile="$(realpath $1)" doas cp $srcfile /tmp/doasedit/$destfile_pfx/edit doas chown -R $USER:$USER /tmp/doasedit/$destfile_pfx/edit doas cp $srcfile /tmp/doasedit/$destfile_pfx/file $EDITOR /tmp/doasedit/$destfile_pfx/edit cat /tmp/doasedit/$destfile_pfx/edit | doas tee /tmp/doasedit/$destfile_pfx/file 1>/dev/null doas mv -f /tmp/doasedit/$destfile_pfx/file $srcfile rm -rf /tmp/doasedit/$destfile_pfx ``` At this point, the only thing missing is the check to see if the file was actually edited: ``` ... cat /tmp/doasedit/$destfile_pfx/edit | doas tee /tmp/doasedit/$destfile_pfx/file 1>/dev/null if cmp -s "/tmp/doasedit/$destfile_pfx/file" "$srcfile"; then echo "Skipping write; no changes." else doas mv -f /tmp/doasedit/$destfile_pfx/file $srcfile fi ... ``` I put this in a [repo on GitHub](https://github.com/AluminumTank/doasedit) if anyone is interested. I know that a major weakness of this script is the number of times it calls `doas`, which could break flows where password is required every time `doas` is run.