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The code in question has worked in more or less the exact same configuration on earlier releases of Windows, however, it is not known to have run on Windows 7 YET! That's what I need to solve now.

Briefly, some C code performs some configuration and security checks before launching a java program, passing some data that would be neigh-into-impossible to do easily in Java. The Java in turn, at the appropriate time launches the same C code which then itself launches a different Java program. The second program launch needs to be completely independent, (think nohup) hence the second launch.

What's happening now is that the C program launches the Java program in the ordinary way, but when the Java tries to launch the C program, it errors out like this:

/cygdrive/c/opt/ST/v3.3/bin/ST.exe: error while loading shared libraries: ?: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory

Because Windows has been such a bear over the years, the C code is written in the posix environment of Cygwin, but all it really does is ordinary C types of things (nothing about it is unique to Cygwin and, indeed, in the past it has been built with Microsoft's development tools, but that environ is not available at present). The Cygwin environ adds a lot of other great benefits, like command-line management of services (cygrunsrv) and a full-on 'nix-like environment (bash, etc). In fact, because Windows has changed how one launches a program from Java so many times, Cygwin helps standardize the Java launch code. Here's an excerpt:

  if (ClientOS.indexOf("Windows") != -1)
  {
     if (ClientOS.equals("Windows 95"))
     {
        cmd = "command.com /C ";
     } else if (ClientOS.equals("Windows 98"))
     {
        cmd = "command.com /C ";
        //cmd = "cmd.exe /C ";
     } else if (ClientOS.equals("Windows NT"))
     {
        cmd = "cmd.exe /C ";
     } else if (ClientOS.equals("Windows 2000"))
     {
        cmd = "cmd.exe /C ";
     } else if (ClientOS.equals("Windows XP"))
     {
        cmd = "cmd.exe /C ";
     } else {
        cmd = "cmd.exe /C ";
     }
     if (cygwin)
     {
        cmd += Shell+" '"+Command+"'";
     } else {
        cmd += Command;
     }
  } else {
     cmd = Command;
  }

(Yes, the if structure could be better optimized.)

In this case, "Shell" equals:

Shell=C:/cygwin/bin/bash -c

And, there's a test program to ensure the above and supporting code works OK - it runs a bit of shell program and ensures it got back what it thought it should. It says:

Checking the ability to run a program using a shell... Yes, shell programs work fine.

The final contents of cmd look something like this:

cmd.exe /C C:/cygwin/bin/bash -c '/cygdrive/c/opt/ST/v3.3/bin/ST.exe'

WHAT I SUSPECT:

I suspect what's going on is that the Cygwin1.DLL file isn't being found properly. It lives in C:/cygwin/bin/cygwin1.dll

NOTE THAT both the system-level PATH and the Cygwin PATH include the path to the cygwin .dll files. Moving a copy of cygwin1.dll to the bin directory where the target executable lives didn't work either.

Would LD_LIBRARY_PATH lend any help here? If so, any idea how it is to be set?

Other ideas?

Thanks.

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  • 1
    @AlexanderPogrebnyak Are you being sarcastic? The same set of code needs to "run everywhere" - and, with this exception - and not yet Android phones - it does. It's presently on Solaris, BSD, OSX, and it works OK pretty much everywhere it has been tried on....
    – Richard T
    Apr 10, 2012 at 16:42

2 Answers 2

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C:/cygwin/bin/bash -c '/cygdrive/c/opt/ST/v3.3/bin/ST.exe'

This won't work because your working directory is where you reside when you executed this command. You will have to copy the cygwin dependent dlls to the directory you execute this from. Othwerwise, you will have to place the cygwin bin directory in your system PATH variable, not sure you want to do that, can cause dll hell.

Also, if you're using anything in your profile, you need to add --login parameter to bash:

bash --login -c

Also, print the final command out at the end, before you spawn the process:

printf('%s\n',cmd)

Just to be sure it's exactly what you want.

You may also run the program with strace, if you're unsure about the dlls being referenced.

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  • C:/cygwin/bin/bash -c 'PATH=/bin:$PATH ; /cygdrive/c/opt/ST/v3.3/bin/ST.exe'
    – Joshua
    Apr 10, 2012 at 16:53
  • Err? Is this an updated command? Are you asking a question here? Apr 10, 2012 at 16:55
  • @JasonHuntley Do you mean to say the cygwin1.dll needs to exist in the same directory as the image I'm calling? Surely you don't mean the default_working_directory has to be set where the cygwin1.dll resides?!
    – Richard T
    Apr 10, 2012 at 17:14
  • @Joshua Tried that; didn't work. Too bad - it would have been an easy and elegant solution! BTW, I took you to mean that because /bin is the location of cygwin1.dll, that should do it...
    – Richard T
    Apr 10, 2012 at 17:23
  • @JasonHuntley I tried putting the cygwin dll into the same directory as the image I'm trying to launch, but that didn't work.
    – Richard T
    Apr 10, 2012 at 17:24
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Several ways.

cygwin1.dll needs to be in %WINDIR%\system32 or equivalent.

or

you modify the PATH variable to add the path to cygwin1.dll in the caller's environment.

or

you call a .bat file that sets the environment before you call the cygwin built exe.

or

you build a standalone version of the .exe (i.e. no cygwin dependency).

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  • Yes, I seem to recall solutions like this from the past. However, I tried... Choice 1 above: didn't work. Choice 2 was already implemented before I posted my question. Choice 3 - I'm no expert at bat files, but that's in effect what happens above; what's your suggestion for how to "set the environment"? And your last one isn't practical at the moment - and would like to avoid it since there must be a solution that avoids that step!
    – Richard T
    Apr 10, 2012 at 17:42
  • OK, but now I've tried almost all of this: moving the cygwin1.dll didn't work, modifying PATH didn't work, calling a .bat file didn't work, and the last one, I didn't try because it would have added significantly to my burdens... And, I found a solution (will provided it in a minute)... Thank you for the ideas, though.
    – Richard T
    Apr 23, 2012 at 22:59
  • make sure you get the right environment, call your batch file with cmd.exe /c \path\batchfile.bat
    – pizza
    Apr 23, 2012 at 23:42
  • and in your batch file, you can launch your script or exe under bash like \cygwin\bin\bash.exe --login -i /home/your_home_dir/script_name
    – pizza
    Apr 23, 2012 at 23:43
  • also look at \cygwin\cygwin.bat then you can see how it is started
    – pizza
    Apr 23, 2012 at 23:46

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