Raymond Chen addressed this exact question on his "Old New Thing" blog on MSDN:
How can I launch an unelevated process from my elevated process and vice versa?
Going the other way is trickier. For one thing, it's really hard to munge your token to remove the elevation nature properly. And for another thing, even if you could do it, it's not the right thing to do, because the unelevated user may be different from the elevated user.
...
The solution here is to go back to Explorer and ask Explorer to launch the program for you. Since Explorer is running as the original unelevated user, the program (in this case, the Web browser) will run as Bob. This is also important in the case that the handler for the file you want to open runs as an in-process extension rather than as a separate process, for in that case, the attempt to unelevate would be pointless since no new process was created in the first place. (And if the handler for the file tries to communicate with an existing unelevated copy of itself, things may fail because of UIPI.)
Raymond uses IShellFolderViewDual
and IShellDispatch2
to accomplish that 1:
#define STRICT
#include <windows.h>
#include <shldisp.h>
#include <shlobj.h>
#include <exdisp.h>
#include <atlbase.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
// FindDesktopFolderView incorporated by reference
void GetDesktopAutomationObject(REFIID riid, void **ppv)
{
CComPtr<IShellView> spsv;
FindDesktopFolderView(IID_PPV_ARGS(&spsv));
CComPtr<IDispatch> spdispView;
spsv->GetItemObject(SVGIO_BACKGROUND, IID_PPV_ARGS(&spdispView));
spdispView->QueryInterface(riid, ppv);
}
void ShellExecuteFromExplorer(
PCWSTR pszFile,
PCWSTR pszParameters = nullptr,
PCWSTR pszDirectory = nullptr,
PCWSTR pszOperation = nullptr,
int nShowCmd = SW_SHOWNORMAL)
{
CComPtr<IShellFolderViewDual> spFolderView;
GetDesktopAutomationObject(IID_PPV_ARGS(&spFolderView));
CComPtr<IDispatch> spdispShell;
spFolderView->get_Application(&spdispShell);
CComQIPtr<IShellDispatch2>(spdispShell)
->ShellExecute(CComBSTR(pszFile),
CComVariant(pszParameters ? pszParameters : L""),
CComVariant(pszDirectory ? pszDirectory : L""),
CComVariant(pszOperation ? pszOperation : L""),
CComVariant(nShowCmd));
}
int __cdecl wmain(int argc, wchar_t **argv)
{
if (argc < 2) return 0;
CCoInitialize init;
ShellExecuteFromExplorer(
argv[1],
argc >= 3 ? argv[2] : L"",
argc >= 4 ? argv[3] : L"",
argc >= 5 ? argv[4] : L"",
argc >= 6 ? _wtoi(argv[5]) : SW_SHOWNORMAL);
return 0;
}
Open an elevated command prompt, and then run this program in various ways.
scratch http://www.msn.com/
Open an unelevated Web page in the user's default Web browser.
scratch cmd.exe "" C:Users "" 3
Open an unelevated command prompt at C:Users, maximized.
scratch C:PathToImage.bmp "" "" edit
Edit a bitmap in an unelevated image editor
1: the implementation of FindDesktopFolderView()
is in another article on Raymond's blog:
Manipulating the positions of desktop icons:
void FindDesktopFolderView(REFIID riid, void **ppv)
{
CComPtr<IShellWindows> spShellWindows;
spShellWindows.CoCreateInstance(CLSID_ShellWindows);
CComVariant vtLoc(CSIDL_DESKTOP);
CComVariant vtEmpty;
long lhwnd;
CComPtr<IDispatch> spdisp;
spShellWindows->FindWindowSW(
&vtLoc, &vtEmpty,
SWC_DESKTOP, &lhwnd, SWFO_NEEDDISPATCH, &spdisp);
CComPtr<IShellBrowser> spBrowser;
CComQIPtr<IServiceProvider>(spdisp)->
QueryService(SID_STopLevelBrowser,
IID_PPV_ARGS(&spBrowser));
CComPtr<IShellView> spView;
spBrowser->QueryActiveShellView(&spView);
spView->QueryInterface(riid, ppv);
}