I'm trying to setup Capistrano to do our deployments, but I now stumbled upon what seems to be a common assumption of capistrano users: that the user you SSH to the remote host will have permission to write to the directory of deployment.
Here, administrators are common users with a single distinction: they can sudo. At first, I thought that would be enough, since there are some configurations related to sudo, but it seems that's not the case after all.
Is there a way around this? Creating a user shared by everyone doing deployment is not an acceptable solution.
Edit: to make it clear, no deploy action should happen without calling sudo -- that's the gateway point that checks whether the user is allowed to deploy or not, and it should be a mandatory checkpoint.
The presently accepted answer does not fit that criteria. It goes around sudo by granting extra permissions to the user. I'm accepting it anyway because I've come to the conclusion that Capistrano is fundamentally broken in this regard.