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Home/ Questions/Q 673747
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T00:37:48+00:00 2026-05-14T00:37:48+00:00

I have a C# exe that needs to be run using WMI and access

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I have a C# exe that needs to be run using WMI and access a network share. However, when I access the share I get an UnauthorizedAccessException. If I run the exe directly the share is accessible. I am using the same user account in both cases.

There are two parts to my application, a GUI client that runs on a local PC and a backend process that runs on a remote PC. When the client needs to connect to the backend it first launches the remote process using WMI (code reproduced below). The remote process does a number of things including accessing a network share using Directory.GetDirectories() and reports back to the client.

When the remote process is launched automatically by the client using WMI, it cannot access the network share. However, if I connect to the remote machine using Remote Desktop and manually launch the backend process, access to the network share succeeds.

The user specifed in the WMI call and the user logged in for the Remote Desktop session are the same, so the permissions should be the same, shouldn’t they?

I see in the MSDN entry for Directory.Exists() it states “The Exists method does not perform network authentication. If you query an existing network share without being pre-authenticated, the Exists method will return false.” I assume this is related? How can I ensure the user is authenticated correctly in a WMI session?

ConnectionOptions opts = new ConnectionOptions();

opts.Username = username;
opts.Password = password;

ManagementPath path = new ManagementPath(string.Format("\\\\{0}\\root\\cimv2:Win32_Process", remoteHost));

ManagementScope scope = new ManagementScope(path, opts);

scope.Connect();

ObjectGetOptions getOpts = new ObjectGetOptions();
using (ManagementClass mngClass = new ManagementClass(scope, path, getOpts))
{
    ManagementBaseObject inParams = mngClass.GetMethodParameters("Create");
    inParams["CommandLine"] = commandLine;
    ManagementBaseObject outParams = mngClass.InvokeMethod("Create", inParams, null);
}
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T00:37:48+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 12:37 am

    Having followed the link suggested by Isalamon above (thanks) I followed Jestro’s advice and have rewritten using psexec.exe (which can be downloaded from http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb897553.aspx) instead of WMI. It feels like a bit of a kludge to do it this way, but it seems to work.

    New code for anyone who is experiencing similar problems:

    Process proc = new Process();
    proc.StartInfo.FileName = "PsExec.exe";
    proc.StartInfo.Arguments = string.Format("\\\\{0} -d -u {1}\\{2} -p {3} {4}",
                                             remoteHost,
                                             domain,
                                             username,
                                             password,
                                             commandLine);
    proc.StartInfo.CreateNoWindow = true;
    proc.StartInfo.UseShellExecute = false;
    proc.Start();
    
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