As a Linux newbie, I nearly deleted Kubuntu after attempting to use sudo for the first time. It didn't accept my user password as it should have according to documentation I read on this web site. It appeared that the sudo command was broken or didn't work.
Two nice users in the forums pointed me to the SudoRoot link. There I found the probable cause: It had been more than 15 minutes since I logged in.
Why does Kubuntu forget a users password after 15 minutes? This just adds another step, and unnecessary complexity, to the sudo feature. Sudo, as opposed to becoming root, appears to be unique to K/Ubuntu and counter to the administration implementation of virtually all other distros. Having to log in as a regular user virtually each time you want to use sudo is not much of an improvement over simply becoming a root user when you need to. Removing the 15 minute time-out appears to mitigate this one small problem.
Also, are functions as mundane as changing time format so dangerous that they really require administrative access?
How about a single-user version without the unnecessary security precautions of su or /root?
Please, in your responses, be kind. It's not like I know anything about Linux!!
Two nice users in the forums pointed me to the SudoRoot link. There I found the probable cause: It had been more than 15 minutes since I logged in.
Why does Kubuntu forget a users password after 15 minutes? This just adds another step, and unnecessary complexity, to the sudo feature. Sudo, as opposed to becoming root, appears to be unique to K/Ubuntu and counter to the administration implementation of virtually all other distros. Having to log in as a regular user virtually each time you want to use sudo is not much of an improvement over simply becoming a root user when you need to. Removing the 15 minute time-out appears to mitigate this one small problem.
Also, are functions as mundane as changing time format so dangerous that they really require administrative access?
How about a single-user version without the unnecessary security precautions of su or /root?
Please, in your responses, be kind. It's not like I know anything about Linux!!
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