97

I have a Python script that will be doing a lot of things that would require root-level privileges, such as moving files in /etc, installing with apt-get, and so on. I currently have:

if os.geteuid() != 0:
    exit("You need to have root privileges to run this script.\nPlease try again, this time using 'sudo'. Exiting.")

Is this the best way to do the check? Are there other best practices?

10 Answers 10

94

os.geteuid gets the effective user id, which is exactly what you want, so I can't think of any better way to perform such a check. The one bit that's uncertain is that "root-like' in the title: your code checks for exactly root, no "like" about it, and indeed I wouldn't know what "root-like but not root" would mean -- so, if you mean something different than "exactly root", perhaps you can clarify, thanks!

3
  • 3
    I am assuming Paul is worried about different systems using different uids for administrators. Normally id(root) == 0, but it is not a must and on some systems it's really not equal.
    – Stan
    May 10, 2010 at 22:44
  • @Stan: then EAFP would indeed be better
    – msw
    May 10, 2010 at 22:46
  • 13
    The assumption that effective UID == 0 means "root" is pretty deeply ingrained into UNIX code (including throughout most UNIX-like kernel sources). Technically under Linux that assumption is NOT necessarily correct. The Linux "capabilities" model allows the system to run with more fine-grained controls delegated via process inheritance (lcap2 wrappers) or potentially through extended filesystem attributes. Also SELinux features could play havoc with such assumptions. For 99% of the systems out there, geteuid() == 0 is sufficient; for the rest try: ... except: is your friend.
    – Jim Dennis
    May 10, 2010 at 22:50
38

Under the EAFP (Easier to Ask Forgiveness than Permission) principle:

import errno

try:
    os.rename('/etc/foo', '/etc/bar')
except IOError as e:
    if e[0] == errno.EPERM:
       sys.exit("You need root permissions to do this, laterz!")

If you are concerned about the non-portability of os.geteuid() you probably shouldn't be mucking with /etc anyway.

13
  • This is the most portable way and even works under a bit more exotic circumstances, like with SELinux limiting root privileges. May 10, 2010 at 23:55
  • 6
    This may actually be worse depending on the situation. Hmm but Florian has a point. May 11, 2010 at 0:06
  • 1
    @Longpoke - are you referring to the situation where a user may have rename permissions in /etc but - say lack the ability to remove a file from that path? If that is what you mean, then trying to determine what capabilities the user does have in advance is a fool's errand. Better to structure your code for "transactional" semantics where A and B can be rolled-back if C fails.
    – msw
    May 11, 2010 at 0:20
  • 1
    @msw: I initially thought, "you should just check if you're root or not and exit", to avoid any transactional consequence, but SELinux, ACLs, and capabilities definately break that, so I guess the only way to really do it right is what you suggested. May 11, 2010 at 2:05
  • 2
    Sometimes you need to know if all the parts of the task are going to be successful before you start making changes. I don't want to do steps 1, 2, and 3 just to find out I can't do step 4 and hope I can back out what's been done. Jul 2, 2019 at 22:47
19

You can prompt the user for sudo access:

import os, subprocess

def prompt_sudo():
    ret = 0
    if os.geteuid() != 0:
        msg = "[sudo] password for %u:"
        ret = subprocess.check_call("sudo -v -p '%s'" % msg, shell=True)
    return ret

if prompt_sudo() != 0:
    # the user wasn't authenticated as a sudoer, exit?

The sudo -v switch update the user's cached credentials (see man sudo).

1
  • 1
    Just to clarify, this lets you check if the user has root privileges in a literal sense, but it will not give the instance of the program you are running root acccess if it didn't have it at launch. You could try something like this for that. Jun 26, 2020 at 23:04
14

For linux:

def is_root():
    return os.geteuid() == 0
11

I like to check for sudo in the environmental variables:

if not 'SUDO_UID' in os.environ:
    print "this program requires super user priv."
    sys.exit(1)
4
  • 1
    This is simple and neat. Thanks!
    – blueren
    Oct 3, 2019 at 11:03
  • Nice. os.environ.keys() has other information in it I wanted, too! Sep 2, 2021 at 18:50
  • 1
    This does not work for root.
    – buhtz
    Nov 6, 2021 at 20:09
  • 1
    There is no need for .keys(), just use if not 'SUDO_UID' in os.environ: -- Thanks!
    – kol
    Feb 25, 2022 at 9:56
7

If you really want your code to be robust across a wide variety of Linux configurations I'd suggest that you consider the corner cases where someone may be using SELinux, or filesystem ACLs, or the "capabilities" features that have been in the Linux kernel since v. 2.2 or so. Your process might be running under some wrapper that has used SELinux, or some Linux capabilities library, such as libcap2 libcap-ng, or fscaps or elfcap via something more exotic like Niels Provos' wonderful and sadly under-appreciated systrace system.

All of these are ways that you code might be running as non-root and yet your process might have been delegated the necessary access to perform its work without EUID==0.

So I'd suggest that you consider writing your code more Pythonically, by wrapping operations that may fail due to permissions or other issues with exception handling code. If you're shelling out to perform various operations (e.g. using the subprocess module) you might offer to prefix all such calls with sudo (as a command line, environment, or .rc file option, for example). If it's being run interactively you can offer to re-execute any commands that raise permissions related exceptions using sudo (optionally only if you find sudo on the os.environ['PATH']).

Overall it's true that most Linux and UNIX systems still have most of their administration done by a 'root' privileged user. However, it's old school and we, as programmers, should try to support newer models. Trying your operations and letting the exception handling do its job allows your code to work under any system that transparently permits the operations you need, and being aware of and ready to use sudo is a nice touch (as it is, by far, the most widespread tool for controlled delegation of system privileges).

7
import os

def check_privileges():

    if not os.environ.get("SUDO_UID") and os.geteuid() != 0:
        raise PermissionError("You need to run this script with sudo or as root.")

SUDO_UID is not available if script is not run with sudo.

1
  • 1
    This answers the question since we're looking for "root-like" privileges, but why do you need the second part of the if in this case? Isn't it sufficient to check for the existence of SUDO_UID? Jan 11, 2022 at 19:09
3

Answer to the second part of the question

(sorry the comment box was too small)

Paul Hoffman, you are correct, I only addressed one part of your question dealing with intrinsics, but it wouldn't be a worthy scripting language if it couldn't handle apt-get. The preferred library is a tad verbose but it does the job:

>>> apt_get = ['/usr/bin/apt-get', 'install', 'python']
>>> p = subprocess.Popen(apt_get, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
>>> p.wait()
100                 # Houston, we have a problem.
>>> p.stderr.read()
'E: Could not open lock file /var/lib/dpkg/lock - open (13: Permission denied)'
'E: Unable to lock the administration directory (/var/lib/dpkg/), are you root?\n'

But Popen is a generalized tool and can be wrapped for convenience:

$ cat apt.py
import errno
import subprocess

def get_install(package):
    cmd = '/usr/bin/apt-get install'.split()
    cmd.append(package)
    output_kw = {'stdout': subprocess.PIPE, 'stderr': subprocess.PIPE}
    p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, **output_kw)
    status = p.wait()
    error = p.stderr.read().lower()
    if status and 'permission denied' in error:
        raise OSError(errno.EACCES, 'Permission denied running apt-get')
    # other conditions here as you require
$ python
>>> import apt
>>> apt.get_install('python')
Traceback ...
OSError: [Errno 13] Permission denied running apt-get

And now we're back to exception handling. I will decline to comment on the Java-like over-generality of the subprocess module.

1
  • 3
    Wouldn't it make more sense to edit this into your other answer?
    – jpmc26
    Oct 3, 2014 at 18:14
2

My app works with this code:

import os
user = os.getenv("SUDO_USER")
if user is None:
    print "This program need 'sudo'"
    exit()
4
  • Bad code. The error thrown here is TypeError, since if you're not running as root, os.getenv("SUDO_USER") return None which is of type NoneType, and you cannot concatenate str and NoneType. If you want to use os.getenv("SUDO_USER") to solve the problem, you should do it like this: if os.getenv("SUDO_USER") == None: print "This program need 'sudo'"; exit()
    – Or B
    Mar 14, 2015 at 15:03
  • 2
    Thanks for update, This code will only test sudo, not root access. Because it doesn't check for root, if you log in as root (or you wrote a cronjob like me) you still need to call the script with sudo, because sudo doesn't ask password on root, I was able fix my cronjob with just calling my python script with sudo.
    – Cediddi
    Mar 27, 2015 at 22:56
  • A bit late to the party, but this is indeed very useful! When combined with something like os.getenv('HOME'), this will tell you whether the current user is a root or sudo which is what generally your script needs to know. Mar 1, 2016 at 7:00
  • @PrahladYeri Not sure what you mean about HOME, recall that sudo and sudo -E have different outputs for HOME, and both are sudo.
    – Pedro A
    Apr 5, 2023 at 15:11
1

It all depends how portable you want you app to be. If you mean bussiness, the we have to assume that administrator account does not always equal 0. This means that checking for euid 0 is not enough. Problem is, there are situations where one command will behave as if you are root and next will fail with permission denied (think SELinux & co.). Therefore it's really better to fail gracefully and check for EPERM errno whenever it's appropriate.

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