Information
The su command allows a user to run a command or shell as another user. The program has been superseded by sudo , which allows for more granular control over privileged access. Normally, the su command can be executed by any user. By uncommenting the pam_wheel.so statement in /etc/pam.d/su , the su command will only allow users in the wheel group to execute su .
Rationale:
Restricting the use of su , and using sudo in its place, provides system administrators better control of the escalation of user privileges to execute privileged commands. The sudo utility also provides a better logging and audit mechanism, as it can log each command executed via sudo , whereas su can only record that a user executed the su program.
Solution
Add the following line to the /etc/pam.d/su file:
auth required pam_wheel.so use_uid
Create a comma separated list of users in the wheel statement in the /etc/group file:
wheel:x:10:root,<user list>