This repository is a fork of sw1tchbl4d3's rdo
This project aims to be a very slim alternative to both sudo and doas.
rdo [command]
If you are on Arch Linux, you can download the package via the AUR.
If you are using any other Linux distro, or want to build it yourself, you will first need to install either libbsd
or libbsd-dev
, depending on how your package manager calls it.
Then, as the root user, build rdo
with the following command:
make && make install
After that, you'll have to configure rdo
to allow you to use it.
To do this, edit /etc/rdo.conf
and you're good to go!
The configuration file has the following variables:
username=<username>
wrong_pw_sleep=<milliseconds>
session_ttl=<minutes>
username
: The username of the user that is allowed to execute rdo (no multi user or group support (yet)).wrong_pw_sleep
: The amount of milliseconds to sleep at a wrong password attempt. Must be a positive integer. Set to 0 to disable.session_ttl
: The amount of minutes a session lasts. Must be a positive integer. Set to 0 to disable.
make uninstall
The benchmark: Execute whoami
(GNU coreutils 8.32) 1000 times.
Program | Time |
---|---|
sudo 1.9.7p1 | 13.62s |
opendoas 6.8.1 | 7.60s |
rdo 1.2 | 2.25s |
root user1 | 1.43s |
These benchmarks were done on a single core of an Intel i3-3110M
Laptop processor, on Artix Linux version 5.13.4-zen2-1-zen
.
sudo
and opendoas
were pulled from the pacman repos, rdo via AUR.
All configs were kept as default, except allow the wheel
group on both + enable persist
on doas.
Script used:
#!/bin/sh
$1 whoami
current=$(date +%s.%N)
for i in {1..1000}; do
$1 whoami 2>&1 >/dev/null
done
done=$(date +%s.%N)
echo $done - $current | bc
The script requires bc
to be installed, for floating point arithmetics.
Footnotes
-
Executing the command just as root without any utility to execute the command as root. ↩