Last time I asked a similar question but that was about svn related versioning info. Now I am wondering how to query windows "File version" attribute about eg. a dll. I payed attention to wmi and win32file modules as well without success.
8 Answers
Here is a function which reads all file attributes as a dictionary:
import win32api
#==============================================================================
def getFileProperties(fname):
#==============================================================================
"""
Read all properties of the given file return them as a dictionary.
"""
propNames = ('Comments', 'InternalName', 'ProductName',
'CompanyName', 'LegalCopyright', 'ProductVersion',
'FileDescription', 'LegalTrademarks', 'PrivateBuild',
'FileVersion', 'OriginalFilename', 'SpecialBuild')
props = {'FixedFileInfo': None, 'StringFileInfo': None, 'FileVersion': None}
try:
# backslash as parm returns dictionary of numeric info corresponding to VS_FIXEDFILEINFO struc
fixedInfo = win32api.GetFileVersionInfo(fname, '\\')
props['FixedFileInfo'] = fixedInfo
props['FileVersion'] = "%d.%d.%d.%d" % (fixedInfo['FileVersionMS'] / 65536,
fixedInfo['FileVersionMS'] % 65536, fixedInfo['FileVersionLS'] / 65536,
fixedInfo['FileVersionLS'] % 65536)
# \VarFileInfo\Translation returns list of available (language, codepage)
# pairs that can be used to retreive string info. We are using only the first pair.
lang, codepage = win32api.GetFileVersionInfo(fname, '\\VarFileInfo\\Translation')[0]
# any other must be of the form \StringfileInfo\%04X%04X\parm_name, middle
# two are language/codepage pair returned from above
strInfo = {}
for propName in propNames:
strInfoPath = u'\\StringFileInfo\\%04X%04X\\%s' % (lang, codepage, propName)
## print str_info
strInfo[propName] = win32api.GetFileVersionInfo(fname, strInfoPath)
props['StringFileInfo'] = strInfo
except:
pass
return props
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3Wow, great work. How did you even find out the StringFileInfo stuff.. that's what I need. thanks a lot. Jan 1, 2015 at 13:09
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2
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1This is the best approach to the problem I've found so far. If anyone knows where to find documentation to back this up, it would make a great addition to this answer (I've had a look but couldn't find anything authoritative). May 11, 2020 at 15:48
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Better to add a try/except in case the file has no version number attribute.
filever.py
from win32api import GetFileVersionInfo, LOWORD, HIWORD
def get_version_number (filename):
try:
info = GetFileVersionInfo (filename, "\\")
ms = info['FileVersionMS']
ls = info['FileVersionLS']
return HIWORD (ms), LOWORD (ms), HIWORD (ls), LOWORD (ls)
except:
return 0,0,0,0
if __name__ == '__main__':
import os
filename = os.environ["COMSPEC"]
print ".".join ([str (i) for i in get_version_number (filename)])
yourscript.py:
import os,filever
myPath="C:\\path\\to\\check"
for root, dirs, files in os.walk(myPath):
for file in files:
file = file.lower() # Convert .EXE to .exe so next line works
if (file.count('.exe') or file.count('.dll')): # Check only exe or dll files
fullPathToFile=os.path.join(root,file)
major,minor,subminor,revision=filever.get_version_number(fullPathToFile)
print "Filename: %s \t Version: %s.%s.%s.%s" % (file,major,minor,subminor,revision)
Cheers!
You can use the pyWin32
module from https://github.com/mhammond/pywin32:
from win32com.client import Dispatch
ver_parser = Dispatch('Scripting.FileSystemObject')
info = ver_parser.GetFileVersion(path)
if info == 'No Version Information Available':
info = None
Here is a version that also works in non-Windows environments, using the pefile module:
import pefile
def LOWORD(dword):
return dword & 0x0000ffff
def HIWORD(dword):
return dword >> 16
def get_product_version(path):
pe = pefile.PE(path)
#print PE.dump_info()
ms = pe.VS_FIXEDFILEINFO.ProductVersionMS
ls = pe.VS_FIXEDFILEINFO.ProductVersionLS
return (HIWORD (ms), LOWORD (ms), HIWORD (ls), LOWORD (ls))
if __name__ == "__main__":
import sys
try:
print "%d.%d.%d.%d" % get_product_version(sys.argv[1])
except:
print "Version info not available. Maybe the file is not a Windows executable"
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1I find this to the job perfectly, but it takes over 10s to do it on a 30mb exe :(– SteveOct 14, 2015 at 8:48
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7I figured out from the source that you can cut that 10s down to 1s/2s by parsing only the resources directory, woo!:
pe = pefile.PE(path, fast_load=True) pe.parse_data_directories(directories=[pefile.DIRECTORY_ENTRY['IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_RESOURCE']])
– SteveOct 14, 2015 at 13:10 -
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1pe.VS_FIXEDFILEINFO now returns a list, so you need to change to
ms = pe.VS_FIXEDFILEINFO[0].ProductVersionMS ls = pe.VS_FIXEDFILEINFO[0].ProductVersionLS
Also: Steve's suggestion is a massive improvement speed-wise, and is a simple plug-and-play change to syntaxaire's example. Feb 18, 2020 at 18:25
I found that the only cross-platform answer (using pefile
) couldn't find the version string I was looking for, which is the one shown in the 'Details' tab of the 'View properties' of a .DLL file on Windows. However, this code, based on the dump_info()
function in pefile
, is able to find those attributes, which include original filename, copyright, company name, and file and product versions.
You may need to replace encoding
with a different encoding if they are not encoded using UTF-8.
import pefile
PATH_TO_FILE = 'C:\...'
pe = pefile.PE(PATH_TO_FILE)
if hasattr(pe, 'VS_VERSIONINFO'):
for idx in range(len(pe.VS_VERSIONINFO)):
if hasattr(pe, 'FileInfo') and len(pe.FileInfo) > idx:
for entry in pe.FileInfo[idx]:
if hasattr(entry, 'StringTable'):
for st_entry in entry.StringTable:
for str_entry in sorted(list(st_entry.entries.items())):
print('{0}: {1}'.format(
str_entry[0].decode('utf-8', 'backslashreplace'),
str_entry[1].decode('utf-8', 'backslashreplace')))
Here's a working version of marsh's answer, only using the standard library. Use it like get_version_string(file, "FileVersion")
. See VerQueryValueW() for the valid version strings.
from ctypes import *
# returns the requested version information from the given file
#
# `what` is one of the predefined version information strings, such as
# "FileVersion" or "CompanyName"
#
# `language` should be an 8-character string combining both the language and
# codepage (such as "040904b0"); if None, the first language in the translation
# table is used instead
#
def get_version_string(filename, what, language=None):
# VerQueryValue() returns an array of that for VarFileInfo\Translation
#
class LANGANDCODEPAGE(Structure):
_fields_ = [
("wLanguage", c_uint16),
("wCodePage", c_uint16)]
wstr_file = wstring_at(filename)
# getting the size in bytes of the file version info buffer
size = windll.version.GetFileVersionInfoSizeW(wstr_file, None)
if size == 0:
raise WinError()
buffer = create_string_buffer(size)
# getting the file version info data
if windll.version.GetFileVersionInfoW(wstr_file, None, size, buffer) == 0:
raise WinError()
# VerQueryValue() wants a pointer to a void* and DWORD; used both for
# getting the default language (if necessary) and getting the actual data
# below
value = c_void_p(0)
value_size = c_uint(0)
if language is None:
# file version information can contain much more than the version
# number (copyright, application name, etc.) and these are all
# translatable
#
# the following arbitrarily gets the first language and codepage from
# the list
ret = windll.version.VerQueryValueW(
buffer, wstring_at(r"\VarFileInfo\Translation"),
byref(value), byref(value_size))
if ret == 0:
raise WinError()
# value points to a byte inside buffer, value_size is the size in bytes
# of that particular section
# casting the void* to a LANGANDCODEPAGE*
lcp = cast(value, POINTER(LANGANDCODEPAGE))
# formatting language and codepage to something like "040904b0"
language = "{0:04x}{1:04x}".format(
lcp.contents.wLanguage, lcp.contents.wCodePage)
# getting the actual data
res = windll.version.VerQueryValueW(
buffer, wstring_at("\\StringFileInfo\\" + language + "\\" + what),
byref(value), byref(value_size))
if res == 0:
raise WinError()
# value points to a string of value_size characters, minus one for the
# terminating null
return wstring_at(value.value, value_size.value - 1)
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1At return you can pass (value_size.value -1) because now you get one null character at the end of string. Jun 13, 2019 at 8:44
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Works very well, thank you. I don't understand why something like this is not part of the standard library. It shouldn't be necessary to load extra modules or write elaborate functions just to perform basic file operations!– WatermanJan 27, 2022 at 9:27
I found this solution at "timgolden" site. Works fine.
from win32api import GetFileVersionInfo, LOWORD, HIWORD
def get_version_number (filename):
info = GetFileVersionInfo (filename, "\\")
ms = info['FileVersionMS']
ls = info['FileVersionLS']
return HIWORD (ms), LOWORD (ms), HIWORD (ls), LOWORD (ls)
if __name__ == '__main__':
import os
filename = os.environ["COMSPEC"]
print ".".join ([str (i) for i in get_version_number (filename)])
Here is a version that does not require any additional libraries. I could not use win32api like everyone had suggested:
From: https://mail.python.org/pipermail//python-list/2006-November/402797.html
Only copied here in case the original goes missing.
import array
from ctypes import *
def get_file_info(filename, info):
"""
Extract information from a file.
"""
# Get size needed for buffer (0 if no info)
size = windll.version.GetFileVersionInfoSizeA(filename, None)
# If no info in file -> empty string
if not size:
return ''
# Create buffer
res = create_string_buffer(size)
# Load file informations into buffer res
windll.version.GetFileVersionInfoA(filename, None, size, res)
r = c_uint()
l = c_uint()
# Look for codepages
windll.version.VerQueryValueA(res, '\\VarFileInfo\\Translation',
byref(r), byref(l))
# If no codepage -> empty string
if not l.value:
return ''
# Take the first codepage (what else ?)
codepages = array.array('H', string_at(r.value, l.value))
codepage = tuple(codepages[:2].tolist())
# Extract information
windll.version.VerQueryValueA(res, ('\\StringFileInfo\\%04x%04x\\'
+ info) % codepage,
byref(r), byref(l))
return string_at(r.value, l.value)
Used like so:
print get_file_info(r'C:\WINDOWS\system32\calc.exe', 'FileVersion')
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WindowsError: exception: access violation reading 0x0000000082E47858
when getting the codepages.string_at(r.value, l.value)
fails there :( Nov 6, 2017 at 19:28