I have a Delphi application that restart certain Windows service.
If the user who execute this application has Administrative rights (member of Administrators group), the service restart would be successful.
For normal user, the service restart would fail.
It will also success if this normal user use "right-click" Run As Administrator. But, the normal user must type in the Administrator username and password.
I want to solve this for the normal user.
My idea is to do "impersonate user" within the code, obviously impersonating the local Administrator account.
But, it still doesn't work.
Here is my code:
function GetCurrUserName: string;
var
Size : DWORD;
begin
Size := MAX_COMPUTERNAME_LENGTH + 1;
SetLength(Result, Size);
if GetUserName(PChar(Result), Size) then
SetLength(Result, Size)
else
Result := '';
end;
function ConnectAs(const lpszUsername, lpszPassword: string): Boolean;
var
hToken : THandle;
begin
Result := LogonUser(PChar(lpszUsername), nil, PChar(lpszPassword), LOGON32_LOGON_INTERACTIVE, LOGON32_PROVIDER_DEFAULT, hToken);
if Result then
Result := ImpersonateLoggedOnUser(hToken)
else
RaiseLastOSError;
end;
And I call it like this:
try
ConnectAs('Administrator','password');
except
on E: Exception do
Writeln(E.ClassName, ': ', E.Message);
end;
// Restart the Windows service
// Done, back to the user
RevertToSelf;
The service restart will fail. If user run it as Administrator (right-click RunAs), it works.
The impersonation itself is working fine. I could check it with getting the current username. But, why it still doesn't work. It looks like the user impersonate without Administrator privilege.
Is there any other kind of impersonation?
ImpersonateLoggedOnUser
. I'm not sure it's going to be possible to elevate without going through UAC. I would suggest that you have two services. Add a second guard service that can restart the first service.