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I was under the impression that both the sudo password and the password that I use to login to Ubuntu are the same. But it happened that after logging into the system, tying the password in terminal followed by su, it raises Authentication failure ! error. Aren't they the same ?

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  • They are same..
    – Pilot6
    Oct 5, 2015 at 12:36
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    What exactly did you type? invalid password ! doesn't sound like a normal response from sudo (the standard English-language failure message is Sorry, try again.) Oct 5, 2015 at 12:38
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    "tying the password in terminal followed by sudo" Please provide the exact command and error. "followed"? I would assume "sudo" preseeds the command
    – Rinzwind
    Oct 5, 2015 at 12:41
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    @steeldriver Adding the line Defaults insults to your /etc/sudoers file will make the output on mistyped passwords much more interesting... ;-D
    – Byte Commander
    Oct 5, 2015 at 12:52
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    @Pilot6 they are not. Read my answer
    – Alex Jones
    Oct 5, 2015 at 13:42

4 Answers 4

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sudo, by default, asks for your password, which is the password you use to login. On the other hand su ask for the password of the target user which, unless specified, defaults to root. Note that by default Ubuntu has an invalid password field set for root, effectively making it impossible to login as root.

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  • I think the password field is just blank; I can't check my /etc/passwd file because it's unreliable as I've previously set / deleted root's password, however sudo grep ^root /etc/shadow should clarify
    – kos
    Oct 5, 2015 at 14:48
  • @kos According to man shadow after setting an empty password field "no passwords are required to authenticate as the specified login name."
    – user448115
    Oct 5, 2015 at 15:09
  • That might be overcome by the tool using /etc/shadow, in fact I just deleted my user's password with sudo passwd -d and I can't login using su without password; what happens when one tries to login using su really is ultimately up to su (where su's scope can span obviously)
    – kos
    Oct 5, 2015 at 15:25
  • @kos This is true - settings of pam_unix do change the default behaviour. By default in ubuntu using the command you executed should still let you login using the console.
    – user448115
    Oct 5, 2015 at 15:49
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I was under the impression that both the sudo password and the password that I use to login to Ubuntu are the same.

They are.

If you want a root prompt you need to type

sudo -i

when using the admin account. Mind though: there are not a lot of situations where you should need to use a root prompt and it is more likely you want to do something not the Ubuntu way.

Example (in order: "su", wrong password using "sudo su", correct password):

:~$ su
Password: 
su: Authentication failure
:~$ sudo -i
[sudo] password for xxxxx:
Sorry, try again.    
[sudo] password for xxxxx: 
:/home/xxxxx# 
  • Ubuntu does not have a "root" account (or better: it has been disabled). So "su" does not work since that is tied to the "root" account. "sudo -i" is tied to your admin user and will work.
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3

If you use sudo (usually some command following it) it will ask you your login password, and you will gain root privilege.

when you use su you will be asked root user password (this is not the same as your login password unless you want it to be which is not recommended)

Usually, root user password is not set by default in Ubuntu on fresh install (in fedora you are asked to set root user password during installation). You have to set, only if you want to, root user password after installation.

Here is how you do it:

sudo -i

enter your login password and you will get something like this:

root@computer:/home/edward# 

now type:

passwd

now you will be asked to set root user password.

So they are different thing.

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    Or even just sudo passwd
    – kos
    Oct 5, 2015 at 14:44
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Your username password and sudo password initially the same unless you change them.You can change the root user password using this command from the terminal

sudo password [username] (for example , root)
sudo -i
sudo passwd root

You should be able to login to root using sudo su from the terminal and then use your password. Hope that works for you.

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    "Your username password and sudo password [are] initially the same". They are always the same. Oct 5, 2015 at 14:36

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