Jump to content

Run cmd with an admin local dedicated account on a non admin session


Recommended Posts

Hello all,

I have some issue on win7 with uac and elevated privileges.

I nedd to add a link on users laptps to restart a service. The users are not administrators of their laptop. To execute services.msc I need to be administrator.

The idea was to start a cmd with a runas using the local administrator account I created especially for it. This doesn't seems to work properly.

If I use #RequireAdmin I guess this will on make a run as administrator, but users are not admin so they won't have enough right to run the script.

Any idea?

Many thanks.

Edited by tributek
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Welcome to AutoIt and the forum!

To get help here you have to define "doesn't work properly". More information is needed.

Do you get an error message? Etc. etc.

My UDFs and Tutorials:

Spoiler

UDFs:
Active Directory (NEW 2022-02-19 - Version 1.6.1.0) - Download - General Help & Support - Example Scripts - Wiki
ExcelChart (2017-07-21 - Version 0.4.0.1) - Download - General Help & Support - Example Scripts
OutlookEX (2021-11-16 - Version 1.7.0.0) - Download - General Help & Support - Example Scripts - Wiki
OutlookEX_GUI (2021-04-13 - Version 1.4.0.0) - Download
Outlook Tools (2019-07-22 - Version 0.6.0.0) - Download - General Help & Support - Wiki
PowerPoint (2021-08-31 - Version 1.5.0.0) - Download - General Help & Support - Example Scripts - Wiki
Task Scheduler (NEW 2022-07-28 - Version 1.6.0.1) - Download - General Help & Support - Wiki

Standard UDFs:
Excel - Example Scripts - Wiki
Word - Wiki

Tutorials:
ADO - Wiki
WebDriver - Wiki

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hello tributek

As water posted above a better definition of your problem is needed..

An idea that i have ( until you take help from more experienced users ) is to triger in your users script this :

RegWrite("HKLMSOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem", "EnableLUA", "REG_DWORD", "0")

It turns off the UAC in win 7 [ but don't know if it is ok to turn it off for the known reasons ]

[font="verdana, geneva, sans-serif"] [/font]

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...