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OpenBSD does not come with sudo by default, and normally you don't want to log in as root. When you need to perform sysadmin tasks, you change to super user by running:

$ su

OpenBSD provides doas, a lightweight and secure replacement for sudo. This allows you to run a command as root by doing:

$ doas command

You will want to add your user to /etc/doas.conf:

# vi /etc/doas.conf

(Note the # sign means you must run this as root, by logging in first using su; a $ sign means you run the command as your normal user)

Here's /etc/doas.conf should contain (replace user123 with your own username):

permit nopass user123 as root

This permits user123 to login as root using doas without a password.

After doing this, you can confirm it works:

$ doas whoami
user123

If you find the need to constantly enter your user password for when you need to do anything as root annoying, you can have in your /etc/doas.conf

permit persist user123 

See also, https://flak.tedunangst.com/post/doas-mastery