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I have a command line PHP script that needs to be run with root-level permissions on Linux systems.

On our old, old Redhat Enterprise 2 Linux distro, this code worked:

// If we are linux, make sure we're root
if ($bIsLinux && $_ENV['USER'] != 'root')
    die("This script must be run as root.\n");

However, we've upgraded servers and are now on a modern version of linux (Amazon Linux). Which is great, but the above no longer works. On AML, you don't actually have the root password, but you can sudo from ec2-user. I've even tried sudo -i but that doesn't change the environment variable - and thus the above code fails.

So I need a new way to ensure root-level privileges before continuing.

Anyone have any ideas?

Thanks!

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2 Answers 2

22

Using posix_getuid you can check if a user is root.

<?php
    if (posix_getuid() === 0){
        echo "This is root !";
    } else {
        echo "This is non-root";
}
?>

0 is root, anything else is not.

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  • 4
    please don't use == 0 tho, if you get an error during checking and it returns FALSE or NULL, it will still be considered 0-ish and say "root". use === 0 here
    – hanshenrik
    Oct 19, 2019 at 18:38
  • On PHP (with sudo command) implement $_SERVER environment is $_SERVER['SUDO_USER'], $_SERVER['SUDO_GID'] ,$_SERVER['SUDO_UID'] That means, where contains 'SUDO_XX' it maybe run as "sudo" Nov 26, 2022 at 6:21
5

Try https://www.php.net/posix_getuid and check if it returns zero. If so it is root. If not is is some other user

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