5

Is there any way of conditionally checking (strictly in C) whether a Windows user has administrator privileges or not?

I wish to do this programmatically (not simply telling the user to "Run as Administrator").

3 Answers 3

7

There are a couple of fundamentally different ways. The most common is, unfortunately, rather tedious. It involves finding the current user's SID, then finding the groups to which he belongs, and then finding whether one of them is the Administrators group:

#include <windows.h> 
#include <vector>

bool is_administrator() { 
    HANDLE access_token; 
    DWORD buffer_size = 0; 
    PSID admin_SID; 
    TOKEN_GROUPS *group_token = NULL; 
    SID_IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITY NT_authority = SECURITY_NT_AUTHORITY; 

    if (!OpenProcessToken(GetCurrentProcess(),TOKEN_READ,&access_token)) 
        return false; 

    GetTokenInformation( 
        access_token, 
        TokenGroups, 
        group_token, 
        0, 
        &buffer_size 
        ); 

    std::vector<char> buffer(buffer_size);

    group_token = 
        reinterpret_cast<TOKEN_GROUPS*>(&buffer[0]); 

    bool succeeded = GetTokenInformation( 
        access_token, 
        TokenGroups, 
        group_token, 
        buffer_size, 
        &buffer_size 
        ); 

    CloseHandle(access_token); 
    if (!succeeded) 
        return false;

    if (!AllocateAndInitializeSid( 
        &NT_authority, 
        2, 
        SECURITY_BUILTIN_DOMAIN_RID, 
        DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_ADMINS, 
        0,0,0,0,0,0, 
        &admin_SID 
        )) 
    {
        return false; 
    }

    bool found=false; 
    for(int i=0; !found && i < group_token->GroupCount; i++) 
        found = EqualSid(admin_SID,group_token->Groups[i].Sid); 
    FreeSid(admin_SID); 
    return found; 
} 

There's another way that's a bit simpler though:

bool is_administrator() 
{ 
        bool result; 
        DWORD rc; 
        wchar_t user_name[256]; 
        USER_INFO_1 *info; 
        DWORD size = sizeof( user_name ); 
        GetUserNameW( user_name, &size); 
        rc = NetUserGetInfo( NULL, user_name, 1, (byte **) &info ); 
        if ( rc != NERR_Success ) 
                return false; 
        result = info->usri1_priv == USER_PRIV_ADMIN; 
        NetApiBufferFree( info ); 
        return result; 
} 

In either case, if you have a domain, things can be a little hairy, because a particular user might be an administrator on the local machine, but not on the domain, or vice versa. Finding the info doesn't necessarily change much, but you may have to think a bit to figure out what you really want.

Edit: As @Benj pointed out, the first method could really use a bit of updating. While I already fixed the obvious leak it had, it's still a huge, monolithic function with no exception safety, and generally rather outdated coding style. Perhaps a small update is in order:

#include <windows.h> 
#include <vector>
#include <algorithm>

class sid {
    PSID s;
public:
    sid(SID_IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITY auth, std::vector<DWORD> sub_auths) {
        DWORD count = sub_auths.size();
        sub_auths.resize(7, DWORD());

        if (!AllocateAndInitializeSid( 
            &auth,
            count, 
            sub_auths[0], sub_auths[1], sub_auths[2], sub_auths[3],
            sub_auths[4], sub_auths[5], sub_auths[6], sub_auths[7],
            &s 
            )) 
        {
            throw std::runtime_error("Unable to allocate Admin SID");
        }
    }

    sid(PSID const &p=NULL) : s(p) {}
    bool operator==(sid const &r) const { return EqualSid(s, r.s); }
};

class access_token {
    HANDLE token;
public:
    access_token(HANDLE PID=GetCurrentProcess(), DWORD access=TOKEN_READ) {
        if (!OpenProcessToken(PID, access, &token))
            throw std::runtime_error("Unable to open process token");
    }
    operator HANDLE() { return token; }
    ~access_token() { CloseHandle(token); }
};

std::vector<sid> get_group_sids() {
    DWORD buffer_size = 0; 
    TOKEN_GROUPS *group_token = NULL; 
    std::vector<sid> groups;
    access_token token;

    GetTokenInformation(token, TokenGroups, group_token, 0, &buffer_size);

    std::vector<char> buffer(buffer_size);

    group_token = reinterpret_cast<TOKEN_GROUPS*>(&buffer[0]);

    if (GetTokenInformation(token, TokenGroups, group_token, buffer_size, &buffer_size))
        for (int i=0; i<group_token->GroupCount; i++)
            groups.push_back(group_token->Groups[i].Sid);
    return groups;
}

bool is_administrator() {
    std::vector<sid> groups = get_group_sids();

    SID_IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITY NT_authority = SECURITY_NT_AUTHORITY;
    std::vector<DWORD> sub_auths;

    sub_auths.push_back(SECURITY_BUILTIN_DOMAIN_RID);
    sub_auths.push_back(DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_ADMINS);

    sid admin_SID(NT_authority, sub_auths);

    return std::find(groups.begin(), groups.end(), admin_SID) != groups.end();
}

#ifdef TEST
#include <iostream>
#include <iomanip>

int main() {
    std::cout << std::boolalpha << is_administrator() << "\n";
}

#endif
5
  • In the first example, where does the new char[buffer_size] get deleted?
    – Benj
    May 11, 2012 at 19:41
  • Could always give it a quick mod to a vector<char>
    – Benj
    May 11, 2012 at 19:48
  • @Benj: You should held out for the third version! :-) May 11, 2012 at 21:10
  • Sorry Jerry, +1 is my limit ;-)
    – Benj
    May 11, 2012 at 21:25
  • 1
    It is worth to note that different methods can have different outcome. For example, if foobar is logged-in, and you remove foobar from Administrators group via net localgroup Administrators foobar /Delete, the first method (OpenProcessToken) will claim that foobar is Admin, while the second method will not. I find the first method more preferable because it is consistent with the fact that foobar still have admin power until it logs off.
    – raymai97
    Jun 11, 2017 at 10:01
4

A slightly different (and shorter? easier?) method adapted from some hints on MSDN:

PSID administrators_group = NULL;
SID_IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITY nt_authority = SECURITY_NT_AUTHORITY;
BOOL result = AllocateAndInitializeSid( &nt_authority, 2, SECURITY_BUILTIN_DOMAIN_RID, DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_ADMINS, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, &administrators_group);
BOOL is_user_admin = FALSE;
if (result)
{
    CheckTokenMembership(NULL, administrators_group, &is_user_admin);
    FreeSid(administrators_group);
}

if (is_user_admin)
{
    // do something here for admin users...
}
1
  • I have not tested, but wonder if you know whether this will work with UAC-enabled machines, to determine UAC elevation, not necessarily membership to an Administrator group?
    – turkinator
    Sep 29, 2016 at 19:18
3

Sure you need to call:

OpenThreadToken()

To get the user's token.

GetTokenInformation(hToken, TokenGroups, NULL, 0, &dwNeeded)

To get the size of the token group information (and allocate enough space)

GetTokenInformation(hToken, TokenGroups, pTokenGroups, dwSize, &dwNeeded)

To get the local groups

AllocateAndInitializeSid(&SIDAuthNT, 2, SECURITY_BUILTIN_DOMAIN_RID, DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_ADMINS, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, &psidAdministrators);

To get the SID of the Administrator

EqualSid()

To compare that SID with the SIDs in your local groups.

2
  • Thanks, This helped me but at first I didn't realize that it is ok that the first call to GetTokenInformation was returning an error. I suggest adding into the answer (make sure GetLastError() == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_MEMORY).
    – TBD
    Apr 11, 2016 at 12:42
  • 1
    This is actually a really common pattern in Win32 programming. Whenever you see an API getting called twice, the first time with NULL it's usually the case that the first call is getting the size so that you can allocate the right memory for the second call.
    – Benj
    Apr 14, 2016 at 19:08

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