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A few projects in my client's solution have a post-build event: xcopy the build output to a specific folder. This works fine when building locally. However, in TeamCity, I occasionally get

xcopy [...] exited with code 2

If I use regular copy, it exits with code 1. I expect this has something to do with file locks, although the specific files being copied are not the same, so perhaps just locking on the shared destination directory. I use /y to not prompt on overwriting files.

Why this fails in TeamCity but not locally?

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  • I had similar issues but where related to simultaneously copying the same file in parallel. Could you double check that no file is copied twice? Oct 20, 2011 at 11:36
  • 5
    Exit code 2 means The user pressed CTRL+C to terminate xcopy. Hehe. Oct 20, 2011 at 11:39
  • @SoMoS Yes, the files being copied are definitely distinct.
    – Tim Iles
    Oct 20, 2011 at 11:40
  • @HansPassant I don't know why teamcity would want to press CTRL+C on me! :(
    – Tim Iles
    Oct 20, 2011 at 11:41
  • 5
    Yah, me neither. The other common convention is that the exit code equals the last Windows error or exception. Error 2 means "file not found". Which does of course make a lot more sense. Oct 20, 2011 at 11:55

6 Answers 6

166

Even if you provide the /Y switch with xcopy, you'll still get an error when xcopy doesn't know if the thing you are copying is a file or a directory. This error will appear as "exited with code 2". When you run the same xcopy at a command prompt, you'll see that xcopy is asking for a response of file or directory.

To resolve this issue with an automated build, you can echo in a pre-defined response with a pipe.

To say the thing you are copying is a file, echo in F:

echo F|xcopy /y ...

To say the thing you are copying is a directory, echo in D:

echo D|xcopy /y ...

Sometimes the above can be resolved by simply using a copy command instead of xcopy:

copy /y ...

However, if there are non-existent directories leading up to the final file destination, then an "exited with code 1" will occur.

Remember: use the /C switch and xcopy with caution.

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  • Thanks @Metro Smurf. I can't test whether this would have resolved my problem, but what you say sounds clever so I've marked it as the answer. Cheers!
    – Tim Iles
    Feb 7, 2013 at 14:26
  • I was running into the exact same problem and ultimately ended up with piping in the response. Hopefully this will help someone else in the long run. Feb 7, 2013 at 16:12
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    "This does not work under localised versions of Windows, where the prompt words might be different. An alternative trick is to add an asterisk '' to the end of the destination, then xcopy won't prompt for File/Directory. – Govert Jan 28 at 19:40" So, you can do the copy like this without echo D(which isn't reliable): XCOPY $(ProjectDir)..\scripts* $(TargetDir)scripts* /Y /R . Or do the copy like this without echo F: XCOPY D:\file.zip c:\renamedFile.zip /Y /R Jul 25, 2013 at 15:54
  • @leetNightshade - will the * work with directories as well? Or is this just for files? Jul 26, 2013 at 13:13
  • @MetroSmurf Hm, seems the formatting of my example failed, there's missing backslashes (must have thought I was trying to escape a symbol) and missing asterisk. But yes, it does work with directories and files. Here's the link to Govert's answer: stackoverflow.com/a/14022309/353094 Jul 26, 2013 at 14:15
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I fixed the error code 2 by adding a \ at the end of my path, without it, xcopy will think that it is a file instead of a folder.

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  • 4
    That's it. Worked just fine on Windows 7, Visual Studio 2013. Thanks a lot!
    – Charles
    Apr 24, 2015 at 19:09
  • This worked. I have to say I prefer it to the accepted answer. It's a little more clear and not relying on pushing command prompts. Mar 22, 2022 at 16:27
36

If you are using xcopy in a post build event use the /Y switch in addition to the /C.

/C           Continues copying even if errors occur.
/Y           Suppresses prompting to confirm you want to overwrite an existing file.
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  • 4
    So simple! /Y suppresses the prompt! Why was this so hard to find? May 8, 2012 at 21:09
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    /Y does suppress the overwrite prompt, but that is not the only reason for a code 2. RTFM won't tell you what does cause them.
    – MSalters
    Oct 14, 2013 at 10:48
2

My fix for this issue was to go into the target bin folder, and ensure that the proper subfolder exists there. Once that subfolder was manually created, the build process completed successfully.

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copy fixed it for me. xcopy with /c /y did not work. I was getting an exit 4 so I went with xcopy, but turned out I needed quotes around ($TargetPath).

My script:

if $(ConfigurationName) == Debug copy "$(TargetPath)" "$(SolutionDir)\Folder\bin\Debug\$(TargetFileName)"
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Probably you using TeamCity with git. If yes, check that folders you want to copy are exists in git repository. Usually git aviod adding empty project folders to repository, so xcopy fails to find it and generates a error.

You can add some empty text file to empty folder, commit and see folder appears in repository.

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