I'm trying to create shortcut keys for some commonly used sudo shell commands (for example, having C-c s
run (shell-command "sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 restart")
).
I tried using a straight-up shell-command call as above, but it just outputs the following to the *Shell Command Output*
buffer:
[sudo] password for Inaimathi:
Sorry, try again.
[sudo] password for Inaimathi:
Sorry, try again.
[sudo] password for Inaimathi:
Sorry, try again.
sudo: 3 incorrect password attempts
It doesn't actually ask for a password. I don't want to have to start up Emacs using sudo emacs
, but I guess that's an option if nothing else will work.
The ideal solution would be a function from within Emacs (as opposed to OS jiggery-pokery to change the behaviour of the shell or the sudo
command). Something like (sudo-shell-command "dostuff")
, or (with-password-prompt (shell-command "sudo dostuff"))
.
I frequently call commands from Emacs like aptitude update
. scottfrazer's solution might not be as useful. Synchronous commands make me wait for a long time, and if you execute an unsupported program (for example, aptitude
, which uses ncurses), you will hang up Emacs (C-g won't help), and CPU load will be 100%. Changing to async-shell-command
solves this.
But it also introduces a new problem. If your command fails, your password will end up in *Messages*
buffer:
echo PASSWORD | sudo -S aptitude: exited abnormally with code 1.
That's why i propose the following solution:
(defun sudo-shell-command (command)
(interactive "MShell command (root): ")
(with-temp-buffer
(cd "/sudo::/")
(async-shell-command command)))
Here "M" in interactive
prompts for program name in minibuffer, with-temp-buffer
creates a sham buffer, in which we change directory to /sudo::/
to use TRAMP for sudo prompt.
This is the solution by David Kastrup from sudo command with minibuffer password prompt @ gnu.emacs.help.
Note, you still shouldn't call aptitude
directly, otherwise the subprocess will be there forever, until you send sudo pkill aptitude
.
Read on shells and processes in manual.
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