sudoedit: why use it over sudo vi?
Solution 1:
I stumbled upon this question while searching for something completely unrelated, but I thought I would add the following important distinction, which has not been mentioned at all so far: sudoedit doesn't run your editor as root.
$ sudo vim /etc/farts.conf
Will simply run vim as root, allowing it to read the file. The downside is that the editor now also runs as root and can do anything. If you just wanted to allow a user to edit a config file and nothing else, too bad, you just gave them root on the whole system. Nothing prevents me from spawning a shell from vim with :sh
or :!command
, and since they're sub processes, they will also run as root.
On the other hand:
$ sudoedit /etc/farts.conf
will actually operate differently. It will create a copy with a unique name in /tmp with permissions locked down to only your user, and then spawn your editor normally, without root privileges, on that copy.
Once you exit your editor, it will compare the temporary file and original file, and safely replace the original with your edit if it changed.
In this scenario, it becomes possible to allow a user to edit a system file, but not allow them to run random binaries as root or poke everywhere on the file system.
That is mainly the actual distinction, the rest that has been mentioned is just neat side effects.
Solution 2:
First of all, sudo vim
already explicitly mentions your default editor, which is not necessary if you have it defined in $EDITOR
. sudoedit
spares you from defining the editor every time you want to edit something—and on a multiuser system it allows everyone to use the editor they personally like.
How so? Consider a system where normal users only get sudo
privileges for editing certain files. They are restricted from running sudo
with anything else though. You would have to allow them to sudo vi
and sudo vim
and sudo nano
and sudo emacs
and sudo pico
(et cetera). Instead of having to do that, you could simply allow them to sudoedit
the file, with their choice of setting $EDITOR
to whatever they like. (Imagine you'd force an Emacs lover to use Vim…)
Another issue is that if your $EDITOR
is set to vim
, and you have customization settings for it in your user's .vimrc
, those settings will not be used if you use sudo vim
or sudo $EDITOR
. sudoedit
however preserves the calling user's environment, and therefore your settings.
See also: What's so great about sudoedit?