Windows 11 looks to be getting a key Linux tool added in the future


What you need to know

  • Users of Linux and macOS may well be familiar with the sudo command, used regularly in the terminal, and it looks like Windows may finally be getting its own version. 
  • Spotted in a preview build of Windows Server, a new option to enable sudo with three configurable options is present in the developer settings. 
  • The average user will likely never touch this, but it would set Windows more in line with other platforms for system admins and developers who spend their time in the terminal. 
  • Presumably it could also reduce the need to launch a terminal specifically with administrator privileges. 

For those who work across Windows 11 as well as Linux (or macOS), there are different ways of doing things. For the latter two, there are many similarities, but Windows has always been a little different. Now, though, it looks like one key tool used elsewhere may be coming to Windows. 

Spotted in a leaked Windows Server preview build by Windows Latest, a new option to enable sudo looks like it’s being added. This would bring some operations from within the terminal on Windows in line with Linux and macOS. 

What is sudo? 

(Image credit: Windows Latest)

Sudo simply means “superuser do” and is used when requiring elevated privileges on a user account while executing commands. For example, on Debian-based Linux distros, you would enter sudo apt update to update your system packages. Not everything requires elevated privileges, but the command applies them as and when necessary. 





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