I am writing a piece of C code that will run some sudo
command in system(\"sudo ip route ...\")
function call.
This call is being done in a pth
You don't need to do anything special to inherit the root privileges that sudo
has given you. Processes generally automatically inherit the privileges of their parents. The reason system(3)
isn't working is probably either because you're root (see below) or because you're on a thread.
That being said, don't use system(3)
. This is because sudo
works by using setuid, and that doesn't play well with system()
. Therefore, use the exec(3)
family of functions instead (except for execlp()
and execvp()
). See man 3 system for more information.
Now, with that being said, don't use system(3)
or exec(3)
. Instead, just directly call the C API for manipulating the IP tables. Why would you waste system resources spawning a new process or two, when you could just simplify your program instead? (At this point you're getting to the point where your question belongs on Stack Overflow, though).
system("echo XXXX | sudo -S gedit");
Where XXXX your password.