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The following piece of source does run nicely with Windows up until vista. With Windows 7 (and the new .net 3.5) it always produces an out of memory exception, when I try to load a raw image file from my Nikon D90.
Some might say "loading nef's is not supported", but it did run nicely up until vista, only Windows 7 broke it, so I'd disagree.

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.ComponentModel;
using System.Data;
using System.Drawing;
using System.Text;
using System.Windows.Forms;
namespace QuickImageLoader
{
  public partial class Form1 : Form
  {
    public Form1()
    {
      InitializeComponent();
    }
    private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
      DialogResult res = openFileDialog1.ShowDialog();
      if (res == DialogResult.OK)
      {
        pictureBox1.Image = Image.FromFile(openFileDialog1.FileName); // crash happens
        pictureBox1.Refresh();
      }
    }
  }
}

Download a sample nef file to reproduce error.

Is this a bug in Windows 7? In .net 3.5? Or is it something that should have never worked with XP/Vista?

[Update] Since a few people neither know nor read my introduction above: loading the nef like this does work on XP/Vista without installing the Nikon Raw Codec. And installing the codec does not solve the problem (folks, it got nothing to do with the codec sigh).

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It seems that "Out of memory" is the default way for that method to signal an error. Any error: "If the file does not have a valid image format or if GDI+ does not support the pixel format of the file, this method throws an OutOfMemoryException exception." – Johannes Rössel Oct 29 at 14:36
I tried this code on four different installations of Windows 7. I even scrapped a system, reinstalled Windows 7 to be sure I got a clean box. Still I get the error. So, how do I resolve that error? – Sam Oct 29 at 14:41
Does an analysis with Process Monitor show any missing files/registry keys? – divo Oct 29 at 14:50
Something that I haven't seen mentioned - have you tried opening the file in question in the native Windows image viewer? I'd imagine that uses the same set of codecs that .NET uses. It might not help, but it'll at least tell you if the problem is a missing codec or not. – iKenndac Oct 29 at 14:52
divo, I can't find any abnormalities in process monitor. Of course there is a lot of noise (33,000 events) going on, so there might be something hidden. But since a fresh install did not fix, I'd be surprised. iKenndac, the native image viewer shows the file if, and only if, the nikon raw codec is installed (which works on all these systems). The load problem above persists regardless of the codec. This problem has no connection to the installation state of the codec. – Sam Oct 29 at 15:40
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3 Answers

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Did you installed the Nikon Raw Codec? Windows itself (and .NET Framework) does not know to handle Nikons Raw format.

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It does here on Vista. And I never installed any raw codec on this machine. – Johannes Rössel Oct 29 at 14:35
The code works on XP/Vista without the Nikon Raw Codec. On Windows 7 it does not work, regardless of any Raw Codecs. – Sam Oct 29 at 14:37
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By itself, Image.FromFile does not support a lot of image types, but more can be installed.

So, did you install something into Vista that made this work? Like a Nikon Codec pack or something that would add that support?

And that error message means one of two:

  • The image file is not supported (which can, as pointed out above, be fixed by installing the appropriate codecs or whatnot)
  • The image file is indeed supported, but the file contents are corrupt, so some value inside that is used to allocate a memory struct is way beyond bounds (like an image that says it is 217273373 pixels wide)

I see from the comments that there is some discussion here. I do not know whether Microsoft explicitly pulled the format by themselves, or was forced to do so, but I can confirm that GDI+ does not support NEF on my Windows 7 installation, so regardless of whether XP or Vista supported it, and regardless of the reason for why it is no longer support, Windows 7 does not support NEF-loading in GDI+ out of the box.

So you need to install something.

link|flag
I can confirm that it works out of the box on Vista. Just tried and I didn't install a raw codec. – Johannes Rössel Oct 29 at 14:35
The code does work without installing the Nikon Raw Codec on XP/Vista. – Sam Oct 29 at 14:38
i am unconvinced by the down-votes; these posts contain useful information, even if it didnt work. – Pondidum Oct 29 at 14:42
1  
So, perhaps that is your answer... Perhaps support for that codec was not included in Windows 7. This happens frequently as licensing issues cause MS to pull native support for certain things. I would research the coded support differences between them. – Brian Rudolph Oct 29 at 14:44
Well, I don't think wrong information is useful, rather the opposite. Try for yourself, you'll notice my example code and file will work with Vista/Xp and won't for Windows 7, which no part of the answer explains. – Sam Oct 29 at 14:46
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.ImageFromFile has a but causing your app to connected to the file on HDD long after you are done with it.

You should read the image via a filestream so you don't stay linked to it. Even as far ahead as framework 3.5 MS has not fixed this bug

link|flag
I don't think this is related to my question at all, is it? – Sam Oct 30 at 8:57
Btw, for your problem: did you dispose the image? I never had this problem even for tens of thousands of images, as long as I properly dispose them (I usually used using()) – Sam Nov 2 at 13:38

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