CPAU V01.11.00cpp Joe Richards (joe@joeware.net) November 2005 Usage: CPAU -u user [-p password] -ex "WhatToRun" [switches] user User to log on as. Ex: user or domain\user password User's password WhatToRun What to execute Switches: (designated by - or /) -profile Do local logon with profile instead of net logon -localwithprofile Alias for -profile -lwp Alias for -profile -localwithoutprofile Local logon but do not load profile. -lwop Alias for -localwithoutprofile -k Prefix command with cmd /k to leave window open -c Prefix command with cmd /c to close window after exec. -pipepwd Special method allows you to pipe password in -enc Encrypt a job file for later user -dec Use an ecrypted job file -file Specify job file to execute or create -wait Wait for process completion before returning. -outprocexit Used with -wait, the errorlevel variable has the exit code of the spawned process instead of cpau. -cwd x Start at working directory x. -hide Start the new process in a hidden state. -title x Allow you specify title of command prompt windows. -crc file[,file,file] This option allows you to encode CRC info for files in the job file. When decoded the CRC have to match or the program bombs. Note that it will not chase paths looking for the file, you must specify the exact path. -nowarn Don't output warning about network logon. Ex1: cpau -u joehome\joe -p logon -ex "perl cleanup.pl" -lwp Runs perl script cleanup.pl as joehomejoe Ex2: cpau -u joehome\joe -p logon -ex "perl cleanup.pl" -enc -file cleanup.job Creates job file called cleanup.job to run perl script cleanup.pl as joehomejoe Ex3: cpau -dec -file cleanup.job -lwp Execute job file cleanup.job Ex4: cpau -u joehome\joe -p logon -ex "perl cleanup.pl" -wait -lwp Runs perl script cleanup.pl as joehomejoe and waits for process to end Ex5: cpau -u joe -p logon -ex notepad.exe -lwp Runs notepad as user joe Ex6: cpau -u joehome\joe -p logon -ex logonscript.cmd -lwp Runs logon script in current directory as user joe (see note below) Ex7: cpau -u joehome\joe -p logon -ex logonscript.cmd -lwp -cwd c:\temp Runs logon script in/from c:\temp as user joe (see note below) Ex8: cpau -u joe -p logon -ex logonscript.cmd -enc -file logon.job -crc logonscript.cmd Encodes logon.job file and CRC protects the batch file Notes: I had to add some protection to this app. It seems people were running this with a networked drive for the current working directory. Microsoft prevents cross- security context access of network drives on purpose, this causes CPAU to not be able to fire the process up. To correct for that, if CPAU realizes your current working directory is a network drive it will change the CWD to the default local path (usually c:\windows\system32). To override this functionality you must specify the CWD option, note that if you set it to a network drive you most likely will not function properly. Also note that this is not a bug in CPAU, this is purposeful functionality from MS. You can see this out of anything that changes your local security context. If you are using this for a logon script or something else where you need the permissions to take affect locally, you need to specify the -lwp (or -profile) switch. By default the process spawned has the current user's security context locally and the new security context remotely. Also keep in mind the note above concerning network drives, logon scripts run from network drives, you will need to set the CWD to a local machine (c:\temp maybe) and copy whatever files are necessary locally and then run cpau. As of Version 1.08.00 I have added the ability to insert environment variables into the job file. Normally env vars get converted into their values on the machine encoding the job file, I have made it so you can escape these so they will get decoded on the machine that runs the job file. To do this, on the command line when building the job file specify the environment variable like {%{env-var}%} instead of like %env-var%. So for instance if you wanted SystemRoot you would specify {%{SystemRoot}%}. This only works for items that are part of the -EX parameter. As of Version 1.08.00 I have also added additional protection around the CRC option. When you add CRC files to the job file, cpau will mark the file in such a way that no version prior to 1.08.00 will be able to use the job file. This is to prevent someone from taking a 1.08.00 or better job file with CRCs and use an older version of CPAU to avoid the CRCs. As of Version 1.08.00 I have also added the feature to display the encoded information when creating the job file. This should help reduce the questions I am getting on why a certain job file doesn't work. Often what people specify isn't encoded in the way they think, especially around env vars. As of Version 1.11.00 the -lwop option was added which allows a local logon without loading the user's profile. This may cause odd responses in some programs. If you experience issues, use -lwp to load the user's profile to see if that works. As of Version 1.11.00 I am specifically disallowing use from LocalSystem. This is something that works on older OS versions but doesn't work on XP SP2 and K3 and the inconsistency was causing a lot of support issues. The primary intent of this application is to allow interactive logons to switch security context for specific processes, not crutch unattended applications working for web apps and from the task scheduler. This software is Freeware. Use it as you wish at your own risk. If you have improvement ideas, bugs, or just wish to say Hi, I receive email 24x7 and read it in a semi-regular timeframe. You can usually find me at joe@joeware.net