Can Touch ID on Mac authenticate sudo in Terminal?
12 Answers
To allow TouchID on your Mac to authenticate you for sudo
access instead of a password you need to do the following.
Open Terminal
Switch to the root user with
sudo su -
Edit the
/etc/pam.d/sudo
file with a command-line editor such asvim
ornano
The contents of this file should look like one of the following examples:
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# sudo: auth account password session auth required pam_opendirectory.so account required pam_permit.so password required pam_deny.so session required pam_permit.so
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# sudo: auth account password session auth sufficient pam_smartcard.so auth required pam_opendirectory.so account required pam_permit.so password required pam_deny.so session required pam_permit.so
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You need to add an additional
auth
line to the top so it now looks like this:# sudo: auth account password session auth sufficient pam_tid.so auth sufficient pam_smartcard.so auth required pam_opendirectory.so account required pam_permit.so password required pam_deny.so session required pam_permit.so
Save the file. (Note: this file is normally read-only so saving your changes may require you to force the save, e.g.
vim
will require you to usewq!
when saving)Also note that
pam_smartcard.so
may not be present on older MacOS versions.Exit from the root user or start a new terminal session.
Try to use
sudo
, and you should be prompted to authenticate with TouchID as shown below.If you click 'Cancel,' you can just enter your password at the terminal prompt. If you click 'Use Password' you can enter your password in the dialog box.
If you SSH into your machine it will fall back to just use your password, since you can't send your TouchID fingerprints over SSH.
Note: See answer by user Pierz below if you're using iTerm, as there's a setting you need to explicitly change to enable this feature.
Note:
Recent MacOS updates may remove the entry. If TouchID stops working for sudo
then check if the entry was removed and add it back in, following these instructions again.
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10Seems to work! Are there any security implications with this? Dec 11, 2017 at 10:07
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8This should be the accepted answer - It's clear what happens, how it's done, and there is no need to install third party software. Jun 20, 2018 at 11:19
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2This worked only after I did apple.stackexchange.com/a/355880/158188 (but I did do this first) Jun 18, 2019 at 2:23
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29@Znarkus one potential security implication is that, at least in the US, you cannot be compelled to give up a password by a court (it's considered a violation of the 5th amendment), but your biometrics are not secret, so you can absolutely be forced by a court to biometric auth. i'm not sure that's a concern for most people, but it's a good piece of knowledge to have.– sneakMar 21, 2020 at 9:40
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14No need for all the steps of doing
sudo su -
, editing, force-saving withwq!
, and exiting root. Just usesudo -e /etc/pam.d/sudo
which opens the file in your default editor and seamlessly does all of the required priviledge escalation for you.– CaesarFeb 16, 2021 at 21:03
If you're using iTerm2 (v3.2.8+) you may have seen Touch ID failing to work with sudo in the terminal despite having made the pam_tid.so
modification as above, and it working in previous versions. This is down to an advanced feature that seems to be now enabled by default - this needs to be turned off here: iTerm2->Preferences > Advanced > (Goto the Session heading) > Allow sessions to survive logging out and back in.
Alternatively you can use this pam_reattach
module to retain the session feature and TouchID sudo at the same time.
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3
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I had to do this step, but worked right after I ensured
No
was set in the setting. You can also search for "touch" and the option will turn up. Jun 18, 2019 at 2:22 -
Just tested: When using
pam_reattach
, one needn't either change the setting or restart iTerm — everything works right away! (I haven't tested if sessions "actually survive" since I have no clue how, but I didn't need change the setting). Jul 31, 2019 at 16:29 -
1The touch ID prompt hides the full-screened hotkey-window. Is there a workaround? Aug 12, 2019 at 12:31
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5PSA: Do not typo anything in
/etc/pam.d/sudo
. If you do, you'll have to load up single-user mode to change it back.– MichaelAug 10, 2020 at 16:44
TouchID does support elevating privileges, but as of now, it only seems to be supported in Apple's own apps. My guess is that 3rd party apps will have to be updated to support it, unfortunately. I still end up typing in my password a lot.
See @conorgriffin's answer for instructions to enable TouchID for sudo.
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2
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1
I have created a simple script that enables sudo to use the TouchID PAM module exactly as conorgriffin explains. It does it in a single script that you can copy-paste to a terminal in it's entirety or use the "curl
pipe bash
" shortcut:
curl -sL https://gist.githubusercontent.com/RichardBronosky/31660eb4b0f0ba5e673b9bc3c9148a70/raw/touchid_sudo.sh | bash
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# curl -sL https://gist.githubusercontent.com/RichardBronosky/31660eb4b0f0ba5e673b9bc3c9148a70/raw/touchid_sudo.sh | bash
# This script is ready to copy-paste in whole, or just the line above (without the leading #)
# Use TouchID for sudo on modern MacBook Pro machines
# This script adds a single line to the top of the PAM configuration for sudo
# See: https://apple.stackexchange.com/q/259093/41827 for more info.
touchid_sudo(){
sudo bash -eu <<'EOF'
file=/etc/pam.d/sudo
# A backup file will be created with the pattern /etc/pam.d/.sudo.1
# (where 1 is the number of backups, so that rerunning this doesn't make you lose your original)
file_dir="$(dirname "$file")"
file_name="$(basename "$file")"
mapfile -t backup_list < <( ls -A "$file_dir"/{,.}"$file_name"* 2>/dev/null )
backup_count="${#backup_list[@]}"
backup_ext="$backup_count"
backup="$file_dir/.$file_name.$backup_ext"
cp "$file" "$backup" 2>/dev/null || touch "$file" "$backup"
awk -v is_done='pam_tid' -v rule='auth sufficient pam_tid.so' '
{
# $1 is the first field
# !~ means "does not match pattern"
if($1 !~ /^#.*/){
line_number_not_counting_comments++
}
# $0 is the whole line
if(line_number_not_counting_comments==1 && $0 !~ is_done){
print rule
}
print
}' > $file < $backup
EOF
}
touchid_sudo
This script demonstrates a few cool patterns that I love to teach people who are new to bash or DevOps.
- Create a backup file that is numbered rather than simply
.bak
on the end. (It looks gnarly, but that pattern works with whatever is in$file
and is reusable. - To make it safe to do
curl ... | bash
, wrap everything in a function and call it on the last line. That way if the download is interrupted, nothing is (partially) done. - Put a call to
sudo bash -eu
in your script so that you don't have tell the user to do it. (-eu
are short for errexit and nounset and you should be using them!) - Single quoting bash heredoc
'EOF'
to prevent premature shell expansion. - Making inline
awk
more readable.
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4
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If I may, I would suggest two changes: 1) use
#!/usr/bin/env bash
to support Apple moving the bash executable, and 2) add2 > /dev/null
to the lastls
in the backup file name counter; otherwise, ls will fail on the first script invocation (because no backup file exists yet). Otherwise, these are great suggestions. Thank you! Jun 24, 2022 at 7:00 -
1Thank you @MoritzFriedrich! You are correct on all points and I've made changes. ☮❤🌈 Jun 24, 2022 at 19:33
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1
You can use fingerprint for getting sudo access in the terminal or iTerm, just add auth sufficient pam_tid.so
to the first line to your /etc/pam.d/sudo
file.
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6It might be interesting for other to know that the current iTerm version v3.2.8 doesn't allow this when another default option is set. You have to go into Preferences -> Advanced and deactivate
Allow sessions to survive logging out and back in
: gitlab.com/gnachman/iterm2/issues/7608#note_153123852 Mar 28, 2019 at 8:12
To wrap up Andy and Glenjamin's solution into one play:
---
- hosts: localhost
tasks:
- name: install pam_reattach pam module
homebrew:
name: pam-reattach
state: present
register: reattach_result
- name: detect touch id support
shell: pgrep ControlStrip
ignore_errors: true
register: touch_id_result
- name: enable touch id for sudo commands
lineinfile:
path: /etc/pam.d/sudo
line: 'auth sufficient pam_tid.so'
insertbefore: '^auth sufficient pam_smartcard.so$'
become: yes
when: touch_id_result.rc == 0 and touch_id_result.stdout != ''
- name: enable persistent touch id for tmux and iterm
lineinfile:
path: /etc/pam.d/sudo
line: 'auth optional pam_reattach.so'
insertbefore: '^auth sufficient pam_tid.so$'
become: yes
when: reattach_result == 0
This can be run with just ansible-playbook sudo-touchid.yml
, where sudo-touchid.yml
is what I named this play.
The first step installs Fabian's pam_reattach
, which allows sudo to work in iTerm, tmux, etc.
The second checks to see if this Mac has a touchbar; otherwise we're going to bail out.
Third, we're seeing if we already added pam_tid.so
to /etc/pam.d/sudo
, and only if there is a touchbar.
Finally, we also add pam_reattach.so
as an optional
auth method. According to the author, he might have have some unknown bug, and if we used required
it could result in a lockout.
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3This answer may benefit from an explanation on how to actually use it and why the different parts are necessary.– nohillside ♦May 28, 2020 at 14:59
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Turns out
pgrep ControlStrip
succeeds also on my M1 Max MBP 2021, even if it has no touchbar any more. Dec 24, 2021 at 20:20 -
1really? I have a M1 Max MBP 2021 on macOS 12.6.2 (Monterey, ARM) and there is no ControlStrip process.– huyzJan 16 at 14:52
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On my M2 homebrew installs the PAM module to
/opt/homebrew/Cellar/pam-reattach/1.3/lib/pam/pam_reattach.so
so PAM doesn't find it. Then one is logged out.– BenibrMay 4 at 10:54 -
This is how I test for the presence of Touch ID:
test $(bioutil -sr | sed -n 's/\([[:space:]]\+\)Biometrics functionality: \([[:digit:]]\+\)$/\2/p') -gt 0
.– nikolayAug 29 at 2:19
I created the following ansible tasks to enable touch id for sudo commands if your computer supports it:
- name: detect touch id support
shell: pgrep ControlStrip
ignore_errors: true
register: touch_id_result
- name: enable touch id for sudo commands
lineinfile:
path: /etc/pam.d/sudo
line: 'auth sufficient pam_tid.so'
insertbefore: '^auth sufficient pam_smartcard.so$'
become: yes
when: touch_id_result.rc == 0 and touch_id_result.stdout != ''
My 1 string answer:
sudo su root -c 'chmod +w /etc/pam.d/sudo && echo "auth sufficient pam_tid.so\n$(cat /etc/pam.d/sudo)" > /etc/pam.d/sudo && chmod -w /etc/pam.d/sudo'
What does a command do?
- First, I indicate that I want to do everything from root (using sudo, the trick will not work (more precisely, it will, but more difficult to implement)
- Then I give write permissions to /etc/pam.d/sudo
- Then I add the line
auth sufficient pam_tid.so
to the beginning of the file. See that post - Then I take away the granted write permissions /etc/pam.d/sudo , taking into account Matin ZD remarks
P.S. While experimenting broke sudo and su in the terminal, it is repaired like this https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT204012 enable root
su - root
vim /etc/pam.d/sudo
Revert the file to its original state
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The PS just saved my life! But I needed the English link not the Russian one (support.apple.com/en-us/HT204012), so I sent an edit. Dec 24, 2021 at 19:13
This one-liner will insert the auth line described here as the second line of the sudo
config file (so that it appears first after the comment line).
sudo sed -i -- '2s/^/auth sufficient pam_tid.so\n/' /etc/pam.d/sudo
One thing to mention is that you should first change the file permission then try to make changes:
sudo su -
chmod u+w /etc/pam.d/sudo
Adding this line at first line:
# sudo: auth account password session
auth sufficient pam_tid.so # << Add this here ;)
auth sufficient pam_smartcard.so
auth required pam_opendirectory.so
account required pam_permit.so
password required pam_deny.so
session required pam_permit.so
Then revert it back file permissions when you are done with:
chmod u-w /etc/pam.d/sudo
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1I've been doing and recommending this change for years and never heard of anyone needing to do this. If this is sometimes necessary, I think explaining when would be useful, otherwise this appears to be completely extraneous.– grg ♦Jan 16, 2021 at 22:43
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I had a focus on permissions, not for that line ;) @grg Also If you want to change the file or write to it by default the file permission is 444 which is not writable by anyone. Jan 17, 2021 at 23:20
Here's a Gist to make it as simple as possible.
https://gist.github.com/fraune/0831edc01fa89f46ce43b8bbc3761ac7
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1Please summarise your Gist into this answer. Link-only answers are not preferred here, as if the link disappears, your answer is worthless. Feb 18 at 0:45
In addition to the top comment of Michael https://apple.stackexchange.com/a/306324/388071 the Touch ID permissions process can be simplied by just opening Terminal (CMD + space: 'Terminal'), and run: echo 'auth sufficient pam_tid.so' | sudo tee -a /etc/pam.d/sudo
with your admin user password
Note that TouchID also gets automatically disabled after each MacOS update. To automatically re-enable the touch ID running this command you will add an automatic repair check to your bash profile:
echo 'if ! grep -q "pam_tid.so" /etc/pam.d/sudo; then
echo "Updating /etc/pam.d/sudo to activate Touch ID authentication permissions from Terminal:"
echo 'auth sufficient pam_tid.so' | sudo tee -a /etc/pam.d/sudo
echo "pam_tid.so permissions updated:\n\n$(cat /etc/pam.d/sudo)"
fi' >> .bashrc # Change this to `>> .zshrc` when using Oh-My-Zsh
brew install pam-reattach
and add the lineauth optional /opt/homebrew/lib/pam/pam_reattach.so
(or/opt/homebrew/lib/...
for Intel Macs) before the lineauth sufficient pam_tid.so
. (via)