Closed jackdpeterson closed 11 years ago
There should be a '#includedir /etc/sudoers.d' in your /etc/sudoers. This is default for the latest versions of Ubuntu and RedHat, which I tested this on. That should do the trick. Let me know if it works.
It looks like I just set which user to execute a command incorrectly. After fiddling with it I got it sorted out. Works on Centos 6 :-)
Thanks
I just got the module working and defined a user. What's the process to get the /etc/sudoers file to now read in the /etc/sudoers.d/* files?