6

I used the application manifest file as described here to have a part of my application running with elevated privileges (which it needs).
So when needed, the main program just invokes a small assembly using Process.Start which then handles the task for which admin rights are required.

However, how can I do the same thing on Windows XP?
It seems XP just ignores this manifest and runs the small assembly in the current user context.

3 Answers 3

10

The following code from here does just what I need:

ProcessStartInfo processStartInfo = new ProcessStartInfo("path", "args");
processStartInfo.Verb = "runas";

using (Process process = new Process())
{
   process.StartInfo = processStartInfo;
   process.Start();
   process.WaitForExit();
}

So in fact you need to set "runas" on ProcessStartInfo.Verb. With the attached manifest this code now works fine on Windows XP, Vista and 7.

Update:
See also this answer to a similar question. This is basically the same code, just using arguments as well.

2
  • problem is that XP SP3's Runas dialog has running as the current user ticked by default, and even ticks "protect my computer and data from unauthorized program activity" - this actually reduces privileges!
    – eug
    Feb 23, 2014 at 4:45
  • @eug : quite an old topic but I have the same problem today under Windows XP. Remove 'processStartInfo.Verb = "runas";' But keep it for Windows 7+ (not checked under Vista) Aug 29, 2018 at 13:22
3

Windows XP does not have UAC.

You need to call Process.Start with the login credentials of a user with administrative priviliges.

3

You can use the runas command.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.