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How do I run a sudo command in Emacs?

Tags:

shell

emacs

sudo

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")).

like image 247
Inaimathi Avatar asked Mar 18 '10 18:03

Inaimathi


1 Answers

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.

like image 158
Mirzhan Irkegulov Avatar answered Sep 23 '22 21:09

Mirzhan Irkegulov