Run a command using sudo, prompting the user with an OS dialog if necessary.
Go to file
2016-07-15 17:13:03 +02:00
.gitignore Add .jshintrc to .gitignore 2016-07-15 17:09:51 +02:00
index.js Add support for Windows 2016-07-15 17:13:03 +02:00
LICENSE Initial commit 2015-06-08 14:41:53 +02:00
linux.png Add support for Windows 2016-07-15 17:13:03 +02:00
osx.png Add support for Windows 2016-07-15 17:13:03 +02:00
package.json 5.1.0 2016-06-30 18:19:51 +02:00
README.md Add support for Windows 2016-07-15 17:13:03 +02:00
test-concurrent.js Add support for Windows 2016-07-15 17:13:03 +02:00
test.js Add support for Windows 2016-07-15 17:13:03 +02:00
windows.png Add support for Windows 2016-07-15 17:13:03 +02:00

sudo-prompt

Run a non-graphical terminal command using sudo, prompting the user with a graphical OS dialog if necessary. Useful for background Node.js applications or native Electron apps that need sudo.

Cross-Platform

sudo-prompt provides a native OS dialog prompt on OS X, Linux and Windows.

OS X

Linux

Windows

Installation

sudo-prompt has no external dependencies and does not require any native bindings.

npm install sudo-prompt

Usage

Note: Your command should not start with the sudo prefix.

var sudo = require('sudo-prompt');
var options = {
  name: 'Electron',
  icns: '/Applications/Electron.app/Contents/Resources/Electron.icns', // (optional)
};
sudo.exec('echo hello', options, function(error, stdout, stderr) {});

sudo-prompt will use process.title as options.name if options.name is not provided. options.name must be alphanumeric only (spaces are supported) and at most 70 characters.

Your command should not depend on any current working directory or environment variables in order to execute correctly, and you should take care to use absolute paths and not relative paths.

Behavior

On OS X, sudo-prompt should behave just like the sudo command in the shell. If your command does not work with the sudo command in the shell (perhaps because it uses > redirection to a restricted file), then it may not work with sudo-prompt. However, it is still possible to use sudo-prompt to get a privileged shell, see this closed issue for more information.

On Linux, sudo-prompt will use either pkexec or kdesudo to show the password prompt and run your command. Where possible, sudo-prompt will try and get these to mimic sudo. Depending on which binary is used, and due to the limitations of some binaries, the name of your program or the command itself may be displayed to your user. Passing options.icns is currently not supported by sudo-prompt on Linux. Patches are welcome to add support for icons based on polkit.

On Windows, sudo-prompt will elevate your command using User Account Control (UAC). Passing options.name or options.icns is currently not supported by sudo-prompt on Windows.

Non-graphical terminal commands only

Just as you should never use sudo to launch any graphical applications, you should never use sudo-prompt to launch any graphical applications. Doing so could cause files in your home directory to become owned by root. sudo-prompt is explicitly designed to launch non-graphical terminal commands. For more information, read this post.

Concurrency

On systems where the user has opted to have tty-tickets enabled, each call to exec() will result in a separate password prompt. Where tty-tickets are disabled, subsequent calls to exec() (but not concurrent calls) will not require a password prompt, so long as the user's sudo timestamp file remains valid.

You should never rely on sudo-prompt to execute your calls in order. If you need to enforce ordering of calls, then you should explicitly order your calls in your application. Where your commands are short-lived, you should queue your calls to exec() to make sure your user is not overloaded with password prompts.

Invalidating the timestamp

On OS X and Linux, you can invalidate the user's sudo timestamp file to force the prompt to appear by running the following command in your terminal:

$ sudo -k