As the other comment said, no. But I’ve had the idea and will to at some point write a edit script (that I can just set EDITOR= to) that would just choose one of the first common editors. That could in theory have a -0 option to run as root (there also probably looking through run0, doas, sudo and su). Not the editor, but doing the editing on a temp file and then copying with root
sudoedit copies a file to a temp directory, invokes $EDITOR with that temp file, and after the editor process exits, it copies the file back to overwrite the original. This way you get your user preferred and configured editor, but it doesn’t have any elevated privileges.
Does it give alternative to
sudo -e
(sudoedit) too?i had the same question so I went through the source code and, for now, doesn’t seem like it has implemented such option.
As the other comment said, no. But I’ve had the idea and will to at some point write a
edit
script (that I can just setEDITOR=
to) that would just choose one of the first common editors. That could in theory have a-0
option to run as root (there also probably looking throughrun0
,doas
,sudo
andsu
). Not the editor, but doing the editing on a temp file and then copying with rootOut of the box no. But it would be easy to implement if you don’t need very complex rules. (I don’t actually know how permissions work for sudoedit.)
sudoedit copies a file to a temp directory, invokes $EDITOR with that temp file, and after the editor process exits, it copies the file back to overwrite the original. This way you get your user preferred and configured editor, but it doesn’t have any elevated privileges.
Yes, but how do you configure who is allowed to edit which files in
/etc/sudoers
?