A while back I installed some crazy open source network adapter virtualization software. Don't ask. It was a bad idea and I happily clicked Yes Yes Yes, Oh Yes, I Know, Hurt Me, Warning, Sure, Absolutely, Next, Next, Finish without a thought.

Later, things started acting wonky so I uninstalled it. Unfortunately, their uninstaller didn't so much "uninstall" the program as it "uninstalled the uninstaller then left everything around chilling." This left my system in a really weird state with half-connected phantom network adapters and I was getting some weird hangs. Each time I uninstalled these 7 (!) phantom network adapters, they'd be back on a reboot. Clearing removing them with the Device Manager UI wasn't working for me.

At this point it was either time for a repave of the machine (basically a complete reinstall since I got it into a bad state) or running around in the registry and deleting these phantom adapters. Since I'm supposed to be technical, and since I was ready to reinstall it wouldn't hurt if I messed up the system, I fired up regedit.exe. I ran it as Administrator so I could have (I thought) the ability to delete anything.

I searched for the brand of the adapter I was wanting to delete, and when I started deleting stuff I was getting smacked with

"Access Denied." What?!? I'm the all powerful Administrator! sudo make me a sandwich!

Administrator isn't all powerful. There are other, deeper users like SYSTEM that have access to things Administrator (rightfully) doesn't. Considering that I am trying to removing low level network stuff it was good that I was being stopped.

That said, what's the best way to motivate an engineer? Tell him something isn't possible. I hate getting Access Denied. Deny this, I say! So I turned to the SysInternals Tools, specifically PsExec.

If there was one tool that really "takes the safety off the gun," it's PsExec. You can hurt yourself and your system with PsExec in ways where you'll not realize until it's too late. There aren't enough words with big enough fonts and scary enough evocative stock photography to fully express how dangerous this tool is.

That said, here's cheerfully how to use it! Woohoo!

psexec -s -i regedit.exe

This has to be run as an Administrator. It This line says, "run this command as the SYSTEM account and let the process interact with the desktop." If I look at the Task Manager after running this command, check out regedit.exe:

At this point, I was able to delete basically anything in the registry. One other way I could possibly delete keys that I couldn't as regular Administrator would be to launch Windows into Safe Mode and try editing from there.

Other awesome things you can do with PsExec include running processes remotely (which is kind what it's doing when I run it as SYSTEM, just all on on machine.) with a Service that gets automatically installed remotely and then runs the processes.

Here's how they do it (it's not a secret):

PsExec allows redirects of the input and output of a remotely started executable through the use of SMB and the hidden $ADMIN share on the remote system. With this share, PsExec uses the Windows Service control Manager API to start the PsExecsvc service on the remote system which creates a named pipe that PsExec communicates with. This named pipe is what allows for input/output redirection back to the system that launched PsExec.

For example:

psexec.exe \\REMOTECOMPUTER –i –u DOMAIN\username –p Password –d yourexe.exe

It's useful to remotely execute things, but it's even more useful to "terminal" (not quite like ssh) into systems like this:

psexec \\remotecomputer cmd.exe

Which means you can run commands on that remote computer as if you were there, in a SSHy way.

C:\>hostname

HANSELMANLAPTOP

C:\>psexec \\REMOTECOMPUTER -u DOMAIN\Administrator cmd.exe

C:\>hostname

REMOTECOMPUTER



Powerful but really useful stuff for when you really don't feel like RDP'ing (Remote Desktop'ing) into a machine to simply run a command.

Be careful out there!