Reputation: 23921
Some applications, started with a regular user will ask for elevated permissions when necessary (e.g. a file manager needs to write such folder), and then carry on with the operation.
How can I replicate this behavior?
Upvotes: 7
Views: 9768
Reputation: 1500
As Tamás pointed out you need to launch a new process with elevated rights. I searched a lot in the past but I did not find any way to elevate the rights of the current process.
Lets say your primary app is App1.exe and then you call a secondary process App2.exe which requires elevated rights.
A. You can embed a manifest in your App2.exe but the simpler way is to create a manifest file [a text file] named App2.exe.manifest with the following contents and put it in the same directory as App2.exe. Note: !! Strangely enough, if the name of your application is not App2.exe but App2_install.exe or App2_setup.exe (i.e. if the application name contains the "install" or "setup") an UAC Dialog will appear automatically in Windows Vista / Windows 7 and will ask for elevated rights even there is no manifest file !! This is a sample of the manifest file:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
<assembly xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1" manifestVersion="1.0">
<trustInfo xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v3">
<security>
<requestedPrivileges>
<requestedExecutionLevel level="requireAdministrator" uiAccess="false" />
</requestedPrivileges>
</security>
</trustInfo>
</assembly>
B. You can use a code like the following in App1.exe to launch the App2.exe
QString AppToExec = qApp->applicationDirPath() + "/App2.exe";
// Put any required parameters of App2.exe to AppParams string
QString AppParams = "";
if (0 != genWin32ShellExecute(AppToExec,
"", // default verb: "open" or "exec"
AppParams,
false, // run hidden
true)) // wait to finish
{
// (...) handle error
}
...and finally, this is the code of the Win32 function genWin32ShellExecute() I created to launch a process or open a document when using QT on a Win32 O/S:
Header:
#ifdef Q_OS_WIN // Implement genWin32ShellExecute() especially for UAC
#include "qt_windows.h"
#include "qwindowdefs_win.h"
#include <shellapi.h>
int genWin32ShellExecute(QString AppFullPath,
QString Verb,
QString Params,
bool ShowAppWindow,
bool WaitToFinish);
#endif
CPP:
// Execute/Open the specified Application/Document with the given command
// line Parameters
// (if WaitToFinish == true, wait for the spawn process to finish)
//
// Verb parameter values:
// "" The degault verb for the associated AppFullPath
// "edit" Launches an editor and opens the document for editing.
// "find" Initiates a search starting from the specified directory.
// "open" Launches an application. If this file is not an executable file, its associated application is launched.
// "print" Prints the document file.
// "properties" Displays the object's properties.
//
// Ret: 0 = success
// <0 = error
#ifdef Q_OS_WIN
int genWin32ShellExecute(QString AppFullPath,
QString Verb,
QString Params,
bool ShowAppWindow,
bool WaitToFinish)
{
int Result = 0;
// Setup the required structure
SHELLEXECUTEINFO ShExecInfo;
memset(&ShExecInfo, 0, sizeof(SHELLEXECUTEINFO));
ShExecInfo.cbSize = sizeof(SHELLEXECUTEINFO);
ShExecInfo.fMask = SEE_MASK_NOCLOSEPROCESS;
ShExecInfo.hwnd = NULL;
ShExecInfo.lpVerb = NULL;
if (Verb.length() > 0)
ShExecInfo.lpVerb = reinterpret_cast<const WCHAR *>(Verb.utf16());
ShExecInfo.lpFile = NULL;
if (AppFullPath.length() > 0)
ShExecInfo.lpFile = reinterpret_cast<const WCHAR *>(AppFullPath.utf16());
ShExecInfo.lpParameters = NULL;
if (Params.length() > 0)
ShExecInfo.lpParameters = reinterpret_cast<const WCHAR *>(Params.utf16());
ShExecInfo.lpDirectory = NULL;
ShExecInfo.nShow = (ShowAppWindow ? SW_SHOW : SW_HIDE);
ShExecInfo.hInstApp = NULL;
// Spawn the process
if (ShellExecuteEx(&ShExecInfo) == FALSE)
{
Result = -1; // Failed to execute process
} else if (WaitToFinish)
{
WaitForSingleObject(ShExecInfo.hProcess, INFINITE);
}
return Result;
}
#endif
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 4887
You can also launch a COM object in an elevated mode. See this MSDN article for more information.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 36016
In a nutshell: Create two executable files for windows. The regular executable, and a worker exe file that you use to perform "elevated" operations (by passing command line options).
To the second EXE file you add an application manifest file with a <requestExecutionLevel level="requireAdministrator"/>
node.
When launching the worker app, make sure to use the QT function that wraps ShellExecute, NOT CreateProcess as CreateProcess simply fails to launch requireAdministrator apps, whereas ShellExecute (Being a shell function) can perform the UAC elevation prompt.
It is also possible to do this with ActiveX controls, but as you are targeting Qt that seems less appropriate.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 12932
See this question on elevating privileges only when required in C# and this article on User Account Control
To sum it up: one needs to launch a new process with elevated permissions. The elevation level cannot be changed at runtime. Launching with elevated permissions is done either via WinAPI or embedding a correct manifest in the executable.
Upvotes: 3