Cannot debug with running VS2005 as administrator

  • Thread starter Thread starter bharath_r
  • Start date Start date
B

bharath_r

Hi all,

I am new to windows vista. I shifted from xp to vista only a few days
back. One strange thing i have noticed is every time i try to run a
program i am asked whether i want to continue. The other thing is that
if i do not start VS2005 by saying 'run as administrator' i am not
able to debug my programs. I cannot debug ISAPI dlls, i cannot attach
to processes, although i am logged into my machine as administrator. I
there a way around this?

Thanks
Bharath
 
The second part of this is UAC related. Under UAC, even though you are a
member of the Administrators group, the SID for that group and the related
privileges are not in your token unless you elevate (Run as administrator...).

There only way to get around that for debugging applications running as
other users is the obvious: elevate the debugger. The old trick of granting a
non-privileged account SeDebugPrivilege no longer works because UAC will
strip that privilege from your token, regardless of how you received it.

As for your first question, I am not sure exactly what you mean by "every
time I run a program I am asked whether I want to continue." Are these UAC
prompts? If so, the "every time I run a program part" can't possibly be true.
The only reason those prompts would occur is if (a) the program is an
installer, (
cool.gif
the program is designed to ask for elevation, or
 
On Mar 27, 9:59 pm, Jesper wrote:
> The second part of this is UAC related. Under UAC, even though you are a
> member of the Administrators group, the SID for that group and the related
> privileges are not in your token unless you elevate (Run as administrator....).
>
> There only way to get around that for debugging applications running as
> other users is the obvious: elevate the debugger. The old trick of granting a
> non-privileged account SeDebugPrivilege no longer works because UAC will
> strip that privilege from your token, regardless of how you received it.
>
> As for your first question, I am not sure exactly what you mean by "every
> time I run a program I am asked whether I want to continue." Are these UAC
> prompts? If so, the "every time I run a program part" can't possibly be true.
> The only reason those prompts would occur is if (a) the program is an
> installer, (
cool.gif
the program is designed to ask for elevation, or
 
> Actually, you are right. From the day i switched, i had been
> installing many applications and hence was getting the elevation
> message many times. Yes the 'every time i run a program' part is not
> true. I was just fed up of that message popping up many times.


You should wait with passing judgement on it until you have the system
mostly configured with all the apps you want. Once you are in steady state
you shouldn't get many pop-ups.

BTW, I'm not sure it is useful for you, but I wrote a couple of tools to
elevate things more easily. Most notably, one of them elevates an instance of
Windows Explorer so you can perform multiple file operations with one prompt
(two if you are a regular user). There is more information at:
http://msinfluentials.com/blogs/jesper/arc...e-kit-done.aspx
 
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