I have found a few PowerShell elevate / sudo functions, but none of them seem to work well (in a "as intuitively and seamlessly as on every Unix and Linux distribution" way). They are mostly redundant as they don't work well. If someone has a seamlessly working elevate / sudo on PowerShell they'll know it.
The problems with the functions that I've seen are:
• They only work with external scripts by calling another instance of powershell.exe. i.e. If you want to do something as simple as sudo gci
or sudo Get-ChildItem
that will generate an error as the methods don't seem to like calling aliases or Cmdlet (for some reason!).
• You cannot seamlessly elevate the existing console session up to Administrator, and this seems to require that an elevate / sudo function opens a completely new console (seems cumbersome to have to open a new console for nothing!)?
Does anyone have a reliable elevate / sudo that they use? I don't expect it to be perfect, if there are good technical reasons why things like the above do not work (maybe to do with limitations of the PowerShell host itself not being capable enough) then that's fine, but it would be good to know how far we can get with a functional elevate / sudo within PowerShell. It's often a shame that, although PowerShell is massively more advanced than bash (and it's object manipulation capabilities blow away Python and Perl imo also), sometimes it seems like some of the most simple capabilities in Unix-land, like sudo, blow away what is possible in PowerShell - I'd love to see those gaps filled so that PowerShell can be shown to be every bit as capable as Unix (and more so!!) for a change.
Nothing native in the box of course, so, an apples/oranges comparison when talking sudo stuff with Windows.
Security boundaries/functionalities are just different, as well all know, and the sudo equivalent in Windows (and thus PowerShell) is RunAs and that will pop Windows UAC, no getting around that, without turning UAC off (don't do this) or setting up an AppCompat shim.
So, when you say functions, are you saying you have already tired these:
Find-Module -Name '*sudo*' |
Select Name, Version, Type, Description
# Results
<#
Name Version Type Description
---- ------- ---- -----------
Sudo 2.1.0 Module Use functionality similar to sudo in PowerShell. GitHub: https://github.com/pldmgg/Sudo
PSSudo 1.4.0 Module Function for executing programs with adminstrative privileges
#>
This type of question comes up a lot here and has been answered several times. So, are you saying, you tried the below?
How to sudo on powershell on Windows
Start-Process -Verb RunAs powershell.exe -Args "-executionpolicy bypass -command Set-Location \`"$PWD\`"; .\install.ps1"
Sudo !! equivalent in PowerShell
runas /user:domain\administrator $^
Is there any 'sudo' command for Windows?
doskey sudo= runas /user:Administrator "cmd /k cd \"%cd%\" & $*"
runas /noprofile /user:Administrator cmd
See also: