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I'm using Microsoft Visual Studio 2008 with a Windows target deployment. How would I make a file "update itself"? I've already got the "transmitting over a network" part down, but how do I make an executable write over itself?

Basically, I want to write an auto-updater for a directory that also includes the auto-updater, and the updater needs to update EVERYTHING in the directory.

Maybe a ways to pend the changes to the file for until the file lock is released would work. If I were to do that though, I'd probably follow it up with a hot-patch.

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Possible Dupe: stackoverflow.com/questions/250175/… – crashmstr Jun 17 at 20:36
Not a dupe, this is specifically NATIVE C++. – wowus Jun 17 at 20:46

6 Answers

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You cannot generally modify an app while it is running. You will need to close down the original program and modify it from another location.

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Write a new executable and delete or save a copy of the old one -- you could send a diff over the network and have a third program, the update monitor or whatever, to apply it. It would be just a small script that could be started from the remote app when it realizes an update is available. The updater could rename itself to $UPDATER_OLD_VERSION or whatever, write an updated copy of itself with the appropriate name, and then when the new updater is run you check if there is a file named $UPDATER_OLD_VERSION in the app directory and delete it. All other files could just be updated/overwritten.

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Nope. That solution is too messy for me. I'd rather not have "temp data" floating around. What if the computer crashes in the middle! – wowus Jun 17 at 20:41
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@wowus - Much better that it crash writing temporary data than overwriting the actual exe. Besides, the fix is easy: Write to a tempfile then call MoveFile to put it in its final location. On the same volume, MoveFile is atomic so a crash won't leave it in an inconsistent state. – Michael Jun 17 at 20:47
SoloBold's suggestion is how this kind of thing is generally done. The appliucation you are updating can't update itself. As you say, what if the computer crashes in the middle? – John Dibling Jun 17 at 21:03
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You can't overwrite a file while it's executing, but you CAN rename it. In my updater, I rename the existing exe to something meaningful (oldname_dateandtime), then write the new copy in. Then auto-shut our system down and restart it from a service. When the app starts, it's the new version running.

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I do the same, and clean out old versions on startup. – Marco van de Voort Jun 18 at 8:07
We leave the old ones around so our field service engineers can revert in the case of a problem. Of course, we have the luxury of field service engineers :-). Old versions get cleaned out at the next upgrade tick. – Bob Moore Jun 18 at 21:03
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I do this using an InnoSetup setup.exe that is launched silently and shuts my app down before it starts installing the new files. I had to add custom Pascal [Code] sections to ensure everything shuts down but it does the job.

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Short of writing a device driver or hacking the OS, I think some scheme like this is the only way to do it. When you run an executable under Windows, the OS holds it open write locked. – T.E.D. Jun 17 at 20:49
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When I made a updater, I should separate the program several. The main reason was just same as what you want to do. Simply say, B updates target application plus A and A updates B. I tried to find another way but what I did was made extra small and simple updater. :(

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I think you are talking about file versions and updaters. As you said you need autoupdater.So you need to create a service which monitors your install directory and compares the file version on your disk with server.

Once mismatch happens you can ask latest data from server . If the files going to be replaced are in use you have to mark them for deletion / unregistration during next reboot and you can mention these using registry.

You can copy all files in cache and later during reboot copy them to install directory.

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