It seems that somewhere between sudo 1.7.2p2 and 1.7.4p5 the behaviour for waiting for executing processes has changed. It looks like in the older versions sudo would start the new process, and then quit. In the newer versions it starts the new process, and then waits for it. There is a bit of a discussion about it here: http://www.sudo.ws/pipermail/sudo-users/2010-August/004461.html which mentions that it is to stop it from breaking PAM session support.
This change is breaking one of my scripts which uses sudo to execute commands in the background, as with the older version sudo the command I want to execute would be backgrounded, and with the new version it is sudo itself that is backgrounded.
For example, the process returned by $! in this case is for sleep
user@localhost$ sudo -V
Sudo version 1.7.2p2
user@localhost$ sudo -u poweruser sleep 60 &
[1] 17491
user@localhost$ ps -fp $!
UID PID PPID C STIME TTY TIME CMD
poweruser 17491 17392 0 16:43 pts/0 00:00:00 sleep 60
Whereas in this case it is for sudo
user@localhost$ sudo -V
Sudo version 1.7.4p5
user@localhost$ sudo -u poweruser sleep 60 &
[1] 792
user@localhost$ ps -fp $!
UID PID PPID C STIME TTY TIME CMD
root 792 29257 0 16:42 pts/3 00:00:00 sudo -u poweruser sleep 60
Is it possible to get the process ID for a child process executed by sudo version 1.7.4p5? The $! variable returns the PID for sudo, and running sudo with the -b option doesn' seem to make the child PID available. Is it possible (without recompiling sudo) to revert the behaviour of sudo to stop it from waiting for child processes?
Thanks