> Krishnakant (K) wrote:
>K> On Thu, 2009-07-23 at 13:50 +0200, paul wrote:
>>> If the user running python program is allowed to call setuid() then yes.
>>>
>K> NO, i don't think i can do that. I am getting opperation not permitted.
>K> Any ways I think probably subprocess will have to sor
Krishnakant schrieb:
On Thu, 2009-07-23 at 13:50 +0200, paul wrote:
If the user running python program is allowed to call setuid() then yes.
NO, i don't think i can do that. I am getting opperation not permitted.
Any ways I think probably subprocess will have to sort it out.
Did you try r
On Thu, 2009-07-23 at 13:50 +0200, paul wrote:
> If the user running python program is allowed to call setuid() then yes.
>
NO, i don't think i can do that. I am getting opperation not permitted.
Any ways I think probably subprocess will have to sort it out.
> Did you try running "sudo -u post
> Krishnakant (K) wrote:
>K> On Thu, 2009-07-23 at 00:17 +0200, Piet van Oostrum wrote:
>>> Being a sudoer is not a privilege to issue the os.setuid system call. It
>>> is only a permission to use the sudo command.
>>>
>K> Yes, So I would like to know if python can change the user to some ot
Krishnakant schrieb:
On Thu, 2009-07-23 at 00:17 +0200, Piet van Oostrum wrote:
Being a sudoer is not a privilege to issue the os.setuid system call. It
is only a permission to use the sudo command.
Yes, So I would like to know if python can change the user to some other
non-privileged user du
On Thu, 2009-07-23 at 00:17 +0200, Piet van Oostrum wrote:
> Being a sudoer is not a privilege to issue the os.setuid system call. It
> is only a permission to use the sudo command.
>
Yes, So I would like to know if python can change the user to some other
non-privileged user during the script exe
Krishnakant wrote:
I've seen a method before in a MS cmd script (MakeMeAdmin.cmd) for the
purpose of temporarily elevating your rights but remaining the same user.
There was a need trick in that the script checks itself on what
credentials it runs, if it is not the appropriate one it will ca
> Krishnakant (K) wrote:
>K> hello all,
>K> This is a real challenge and I don't know if a solution even exists for
>K> this or not.
>K> I am writing an application which I run as my usual user on ubuntu.
>K> the usernake is let's say kk and it has sudo permission (meaning the
>K> user is in
hello all,
This is a real challenge and I don't know if a solution even exists for
this or not.
I am writing an application which I run as my usual user on ubuntu.
the usernake is let's say kk and it has sudo permission (meaning the
user is in the sudoers list ).
now when i do python myscript.py