I have a Python app that I\'m working on that needs to access the hosts file to append a few lines. Everything worked on my test file, but when I told the program to actuall
The easiest way to handle this is to write out your changes to a temp file, then run a program to overwrite the protected file. Like so:
with open('/etc/hosts', 'rt') as f:
s = f.read() + '\n' + '127.0.0.1\t\t\thome_sweet_home\n'
with open('/tmp/etc_hosts.tmp', 'wt') as outf:
outf.write(s)
os.system('sudo mv /tmp/etc_hosts.tmp /etc/hosts')
When your Python program runs sudo, the sudo program will prompt the user for his/her password. If you want this to be GUI based you can run a GUI sudo, such as "gksu".
On Windows, the hosts file is buried a couple subdirectories under \Windows. You can use the same general trick, but Windows doesn't have the sudo command. Here is a discussion of equivalents:
https://superuser.com/questions/42537/is-there-any-sudo-command-for-windows
If you are on the sudoers
list, you can start your progamm with sudo
:
sudo python append_to_host.py
sudo runs your python interpreter with root privileges.
The first time you do it, you will be asked for your password, later calls will not ask you if your last sudo
call is not to long ago.
Being on the sudoers list (in most cases /etc/sudoers
) says that the admin trusts you. If you call sudo
you are not asked for the root
password, but yours. You have to prove that the right user sits at the terminal.
More about sudo
on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudo
If you want to remote controll this you can use the -S
command line switch or use http://www.noah.org/wiki/pexpect