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how to do a linux reboot from php file

I have a user brftv on my linux system and I have www-data that runs the nginx.

from the terminal I can let my brftv user run

sudo /sbin/reboot

and it works fine since I added the following to my /etc/sudoers file's "#user privilege specification" section:

brftv ALL=NOPASSWD: /sbin/halt, /sbin/reboot, /sbin/poweroff
www-data ALL=NOPASSWD: /sbin/halt, /sbin/reboot, /sbin/poweroff

But when my php file runs the following code, nothing happens

exec('nohup sudo -u brftv /sbin/reboot');

I added the www-data line to the etc/sudoers above in case it was necessary when running the above exec() (even though I run it as -u brftv, but I'm no linux expert, just thought better be safe just in case).

The php file that runs this exec() is owned by www-data, and chmod is 777, all should thus have privilege to execute from it.

I have tried running the php-file both through browser (would be run by user www-data I assume) and from terminal $ php myFile.php.

------------------- UPDATE -----------------

I did this

sudo chmod u s /sbin/reboot

Which allows all users on my system to run the reboot cmd without password. It works, but I rather not leave it THAT open, so the other solution with /etc/sudoers would be better, if someone would have a hint at what my problem is...

I followed this tut http://linux.byexamples.com/archives/315/how-to-shutdown-and-reboot-without-sudo-password/ and the second example is pretty much what I got above that didn't work for me..

like image 936
Matt Welander Avatar asked Jun 07 '14 17:06

Matt Welander


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How do you reboot the system in Linux?

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3 Answers

I would use a very small C program to grant access to only the PHP group (probably www-data in your case?), use the suid bit on the executable, and exec the reboot command

phpreboot.c :

#include <stdlib.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <unistd.h>

int main() {
   setuid(0); // for uid to be 0, root
   char *command = "/sbin/reboot";
   execl(command, command, NULL);
   return 0; // just to avoid the warning (since never returns)
}

Compile it

gcc -Wall phpreboot.c -o phpreboot

Move phpreboot where you want to run it (has to be accessible by PHP!)

mv phpreboot /home/private/

As root (or via sudo) ensure owner is root and group is set to www-data, and change rights to have suid bit (in this order)

chown root:www-data phpreboot
chmod 4750 phpreboot

The result, ls -l phpreboot should be something like (note the s in rws)

-rwsr-x--- 1 root www-data 8565 Jun 12 11:42 phpreboot*

Change the PHP script to execute phpreboot instead

exec ("/home/private/phpreboot"); // change the path!

Only one tiny executable will have the suid to run the reboot program, and only the PHP group will be able to execute it (and root of course).

  • About setuid and suid bit
  • PHP get the running group id then on Linux doing id groupID gives the group name.
like image 68
Déjà vu Avatar answered Sep 20 '22 08:09

Déjà vu


Giving reboot permission to www user is a bad idea.Create a cron and do system reboot from the cron rather than from PHP script. The Cron will run every minute and check for reboot flag. If it is set the it will do the reboot.

1)write a flag to a file from your php program so that the cron can decide whether to do reboot or not.

 $Handle = fopen("/tmp/myfile", 'w');
 fwrite($Handle, "doreboot");
 fclose($Handle);

2) Create a bash script to read that file and do reboot if the PHP script tells it to do so.

#!/bin/bash
arg=$(head -n 1 /tmp/myfile)   
if [ "$arg" == "doreboot" ]; then
  >/tmp/myfile
  echo "Rebooting"
  echo 'password' | sudo -S reboot
fi

execute this in shell chmod +x mycron.sh

3) Configure the script in crontab

crontab -e and paste this

* * * * * path/mycron.sh

4) The user who set the cron should have sudo permission. Add him to sudoers.

like image 40
Harikrishnan Avatar answered Sep 21 '22 08:09

Harikrishnan


The only way I got this to work on my system was to "hack" it by changing chmod on /sbin/reboot like this guy did

http://linux.byexamples.com/archives/315/how-to-shutdown-and-reboot-without-sudo-password/

sudo chmod u+s /sbin/reboot

I realize this might not be optimal in many cases, but this mediaPlayer is very much locked down so there is no accessing a terminal for anyone else anyways.

like image 33
Matt Welander Avatar answered Sep 20 '22 08:09

Matt Welander