@product Feature: Root access control enforcement As a Tails user when I set an administration password in Tails Greeter I can use the password for attaining administrative privileges. But when I do not set an administration password I should not be able to attain administration privileges at all. Background: Given a computer And the network is unplugged And I start the computer And the computer boots Tails And I save the state so the background can be restored next scenario Scenario: If an administrative password is set in Tails Greeter the live user should be able to run arbitrary commands with administrative privileges. Given I set sudo password "asdf" And I log in to a new session And Tails Greeter has dealt with the sudo password Then I should be able to run administration commands as the live user Scenario: If no administrative password is set in Tails Greeter the live user should not be able to run arbitrary commands administrative privileges. Given I log in to a new session And Tails Greeter has dealt with the sudo password Then I should not be able to run administration commands as the live user with the "" password And I should not be able to run administration commands as the live user with the "amnesia" password And I should not be able to run administration commands as the live user with the "live" password Scenario: If an administrative password is set in Tails Greeter the live user should be able to get administrative privileges through PolicyKit Given I set sudo password "asdf" And I log in to a new session And Tails Greeter has dealt with the sudo password And GNOME has started And running a command as root with pkexec requires PolicyKit administrator privileges Then I should be able to run a command as root with pkexec Scenario: If no administrative password is set in Tails Greeter the live user should not be able to get administrative privileges through PolicyKit with the standard passwords. Given I log in to a new session And Tails Greeter has dealt with the sudo password And GNOME has started And running a command as root with pkexec requires PolicyKit administrator privileges Then I should not be able to run a command as root with pkexec and the standard passwords