Thanks for the useful approaches. Yesterday I arrived at a solution of the problem, which I have enclosed in a static class. First, a distinction is made between normal and privilligierten processes.
Whenever a process needs to be run with elevated privileges, I check if I know the user's password already. If not, I'll get it (gksudo -p) and store it in memory. Now I can execute commands with privilligierten rights. The stored password is then transferred via the standard input (sudo -S).
What do you think? Do you have any safety concerns?
public static class SystemProcess
{
private static string output;
private static string error;
private static string password;
public static void Start (string filename, string arguments)
{
ProcessStartInfo startInfo = SystemProcess.Prepare(filename, arguments);
using (Process process = Process.Start(startInfo)) {
SystemProcess.output = process.StandardOutput.ReadToEnd();
SystemProcess.error = process.StandardError.ReadToEnd();
process.WaitForExit();
}
}
public static void StartPrivileged (string filename, string arguments)
{
ProcessStartInfo startInfo;
if (SystemProcess.password == default(string))
{
startInfo = SystemProcess.Prepare("gksudo", "-p true -D 'MyApplication'");
using (Process process = Process.Start(startInfo)) {
SystemProcess.password = process.StandardOutput.ReadToEnd();
process.WaitForExit();
}
}
startInfo = SystemProcess.Prepare("sudo", "-S " + filename + " " + arguments);
using (Process process = Process.Start(startInfo)) {
process.StandardInput.WriteLine(SystemProcess.password);
SystemProcess.output = process.StandardOutput.ReadToEnd();
SystemProcess.error = process.StandardError.ReadToEnd();
process.WaitForExit();
}
}
private static ProcessStartInfo Prepare (string filename, string arguments)
{
ProcessStartInfo startInfo = new ProcessStartInfo (filename, arguments);
startInfo.RedirectStandardError = true;
startInfo.RedirectStandardOutput = true;
startInfo.RedirectStandardInput = true;
startInfo.UseShellExecute = false;
return startInfo;
}
public static string Output {
get {
return SystemProcess.output;
}
}
public static string Error {
get {
return SystemProcess.error;
}
}
}