I have the following trivial C# application that simply attempts to launch "jconsole.exe", which on my machine is located in C:\Programs\jdk16\bin.
using System;
using System.Diagnostics;
namespace dnet {
public class dnet {
static void Main( string[] args ) {
try {
Process.Start("jconsole.exe");
Console.WriteLine("Success!");
} catch (Exception e) {
Console.WriteLine("{0} Exception caught.", e);
}
}
}
}
If my PATH environment variable is set to
c:\windows;c:\windows\sytem32;c:\programs\jdk16\bin
it works perfectly. However, if the PATH environment variable is set to
c:\windows;c:\windows\sytem32;c:\\programs\jdk16\bin
(note the two backslashes between "c:" and "programs"), it fails with a win32 exception.
System.ComponentModel.Win32Exception (0x80004005): The system cannot find the file specified
at System.Diagnostics.Process.StartWithShellExecuteEx(ProcessStartInfo startInfo)
at System.Diagnostics.Process.Start(ProcessStartInfo startInfo)
at dnet.dnet.Main(String[] args)
Interestingly, in the same command prompt where I run the .NET program and get the exception, I can simply type "jconsole.exe", and the program will start. Windows appears to have no trouble finding the executable with the double backslash in the PATH, but Process.Start() does.
Why is the extra backslash in the PATH causing problems, and how I can get around the problem? I don't know where the executable I want to call will be located at runtime, so I'd rather rely on the PATH variable.
Not quite sure why the problem occurs. Though, I can think of one solution that works on my machine:
var enviromentPath = System.Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("PATH");
Console.WriteLine(enviromentPath);
var paths = enviromentPath.Split(';');
var exePath = paths.Select(x => Path.Combine(x, "mongo.exe"))
.Where(x => File.Exists(x))
.FirstOrDefault();
Console.WriteLine(exePath);
if (string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(exePath) == false)
{
Process.Start(exePath);
}
I did find one para which gave me the idea for this solution. From the documentation for Process.Start
If you have a path variable declared in your system using quotes, you must fully qualify that path when starting any process found in that location. Otherwise, the system will not find the path. For example, if c:\mypath is not in your path, and you add it using quotation marks: path = %path%;"c:\mypath", you must fully qualify any process in c:\mypath when starting it.
The way I read it, even though the PATH
variable contained a valid path that Windows is able to use, Process.Start
is unable to use it and needs the fully qualified path .
You can solve it if you first create a ProcessStartInfo
.
ProcessStartInfo psi = new ProcessStartInfo("jconsole.exe");
StringDictionary dictionary = psi.EnvironmentVariables;
// Manipulate dictionary...
psi.EnvironmentVariables["PATH"] = dictionary.Replace(@"\\", @"\");
Process.Start(psi);
You'll have to find out yourself how to manipulate the PATH to let it work for you. But this should solve any issues you might have with your PATH variable.
The accepted answer is incorrect.
cmd.exe will find applications with executable extensions first.
So when you have the files puma
and puma.bat
in C:\Ruby\bin\
, then puma.bat
will take precedence over puma
.
If you start c:\ruby\bin\puma.bat
from c:\redmine
, it will start puma with current working directory c:\ruby\bin
, and your web application will work.
However, if you start c:\ruby\bin\puma
directly, it will start puma with the current working directory in c:\redmine
and will subsequently fail.
So a corrected version looks more or less like this:
// FindAppInPathDirectories("ruby.exe");
public string FindAppInPathDirectories(string app)
{
string enviromentPath = System.Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("PATH");
string[] paths = enviromentPath.Split(';');
foreach (string thisPath in paths)
{
string thisFile = System.IO.Path.Combine(thisPath, app);
string[] executableExtensions = new string[] { ".exe", ".com", ".bat", ".sh", ".vbs", ".vbscript", ".vbe", ".js", ".rb", ".cmd", ".cpl", ".ws", ".wsf", ".msc", ".gadget" };
foreach (string extension in executableExtensions)
{
string fullFile = thisFile + extension;
try
{
if (System.IO.File.Exists(fullFile))
return fullFile;
}
catch (System.Exception ex)
{
Log("{0}:\r\n{1}",
System.DateTime.Now.ToString(m_Configuration.DateTimeFormat, System.Globalization.CultureInfo.InvariantCulture)
, "Error trying to check existence of file \"" + fullFile + "\""
);
Log("Exception details:");
Log(" - Exception type: {0}", ex.GetType().FullName);
Log(" - Exception Message:");
Log(ex.Message);
Log(" - Exception Stacktrace:");
Log(ex.StackTrace);
} // End Catch
} // Next extension
} // Next thisPath
foreach (string thisPath in paths)
{
string thisFile = System.IO.Path.Combine(thisPath, app);
try
{
if (System.IO.File.Exists(thisFile))
return thisFile;
}
catch (System.Exception ex)
{
Log("{0}:\r\n{1}",
System.DateTime.Now.ToString(m_Configuration.DateTimeFormat, System.Globalization.CultureInfo.InvariantCulture)
, "Error trying to check existence of file \"" + thisFile + "\""
);
Log("Exception details:");
Log(" - Exception type: {0}", ex.GetType().FullName);
Log(" - Exception Message:");
Log(ex.Message);
Log(" - Exception Stacktrace:");
Log(ex.StackTrace);
} // End Catch
} // Next thisPath
return app;
} // End Function FindAppInPathDirectories
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