555

I'm calling functions from a 32-bit unmanaged DLL on a 64-bit system. What I get is:

BadImageFormatException: An attempt was made to load a program with an incorrect format. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x8007000B)

At first, I had my projects set to the Any CPU platform, so I changed them both to x86, but this error is still occurring. That's really the only fix I know for this.

The DLLs aren't corrupt or anything, because I can use them with other programs (that I don't have the source to). I thought that perhaps it wasn't finding a dependency, but I checked and they're all there. Plus, wouldn't it throw a DllNotFoundException in that case?

What else can I do? And before you say "Use a 64-bit unmanaged DLL instead," let me point out that there isn't one. ;)

4
  • 1
    What projects did you change to x86? And how do you execute them when you get the exception, through the debugger or manually? If the latter, did you notice that when you changed to x86, you got a new folder in your bin\ directory? It's basically now bin\x86\Debug for the files. Jan 7, 2010 at 21:30
  • Can you verify that the executable is running in 32-bit mode (*32 in the process manager)?
    – JP Alioto
    Jan 7, 2010 at 21:31
  • 1
    @Lasse V. Karlsen: Yeah, I removed the x86 bit from the output path when I changed the platform in each project. My first project is a DLL that wraps the functions in the unmanaged DLL. The second project is an executable that uses the wrapper in the first DLL. Both are set to x86. Jan 7, 2010 at 21:37
  • @JP: Actually, the process manager doesn't show it to be running as a 32-bit process. Why is that? Jan 7, 2010 at 21:37

27 Answers 27

591

If you try to run 32-bit applications on IIS 7 (and/or 64-bit OS machine), you will get the same error. So, from the IIS 7, right click on the applications' application pool and go to "advanced settings" and change "Enable 32-Bit Applications" to "TRUE".

Restart your website and it should work.

enter image description here

6
  • 1
    Oh my days I've been fishing around installing extra IIS components when this was the answer... Can anyone suggest a downside to having this option selected?
    – notidaho
    Jul 31, 2012 at 14:10
  • 3
    Here's a good discussion on the question of performance regarding this: stackoverflow.com/questions/507820/…
    – Ben Power
    Nov 23, 2012 at 1:16
  • I have a problem with SharpSvn and this doesn't help. :( Sth is very wrong with this assembly I tell you... Nov 5, 2013 at 8:22
  • 13
    This answer is a wtf for me, because the question doesn't mention IIS at all!
    – kristianp
    Nov 4, 2016 at 2:51
  • I think something to keep an eye on is when you do change it 'True' it might remove the added 'Applications' which you will have to add again.
    – Saumil
    Jun 26, 2020 at 16:17
154

Somehow, the Build checkbox in the Configuration Manager had been unchecked for my executable, so it was still running with the old Any CPU build. After I fixed that, Visual Studio complained that it couldn't debug the assembly, but that was fixed with a restart.

4
  • 1
    Thanks a lot. This got me too. Checked build in Configuration Manager and now it works (WPF desktop application). May 24, 2013 at 10:30
  • 1
    If you've done all the above, and checked your platform setting, build configuration settings, cleaned the solution and it's still not working - search for all instances of the DLL and delete them. Aug 6, 2013 at 15:15
  • with VS 2015 this is still valid - although I didn't need to restart :) Dec 4, 2015 at 13:18
  • 1
    That's it! Re-visit your Configuration Manager settings is the answer.
    – AndyUK
    Jun 5, 2017 at 9:31
108

In Visual Studio, Right Click your project and select properties -> On the left pane click the Build tab,

Project properties, build tab

under Platform Target select x86 (or more generally the architecture to match with the library you are linking to)

Project properties, platform target

7
  • 2
    This fixed my issue in VS2013, I found an alternative fix is to leave "Platform target" as "Any CPU" but check the "Prefer 32-bit" check box. May 13, 2015 at 9:50
  • 2
    Although you need to be using .NET 4.5 or higher to be able to check the "Prefer 32-bit" check box Jul 30, 2015 at 12:35
  • 1
    Yes, but I converted my project in 'Any CPU' to 'x64'. My 32 bit project working fine but the same code I converted to 64 bit, that project not working fine as 32 bit. Can you please give me the proper 64 bit conversion process...
    – Ismayil S
    Aug 16, 2018 at 13:04
  • 1
    Title should read: "In Visual Studio, Right click on your project and select Properties, -> On the left...."
    – Leo
    Jul 20, 2023 at 12:35
  • 1
    Definitely worked for me!
    – Erol
    Sep 17, 2023 at 11:39
95

If you encounter this error when you click green arrow button to run the application, but still want to run the app in 64 bit. You can do this in VS 2013, 2015, 2017, and 2019

Go to: Tools > Options > Projects and Solutions > Web Projects > Use the 64 bit version of IIS Express

Or you can do it per project at Project Properties > Web > Bitness IIS Express Bitness

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    Thanks. I tried so many and nothing helped. You are my life saver. I have 64bit OS, installed a 64 bit Visual studio [which still runs as 32bit for unknown reason]. When I put my Platform Target to x64, it was throwing error BadImageFormatException. With your fix, it worked. I gave you an upvote. You rock
    – Nathan
    Mar 12, 2018 at 15:46
  • I'm glad I could help :)
    – paibamboo
    Mar 13, 2018 at 1:24
  • This is the answer I need. Thanks a lot!
    – yushulx
    Apr 28, 2018 at 6:54
  • Thanks a lot, this solved the problem. It works well with Visual Studio 2017 32-bit process.
    – samir105
    May 27, 2018 at 6:02
  • with above setting only it was not working, I did one ore change in a project setting
    – Mani
    Apr 30, 2020 at 6:30
58

I just had this problem also. Tried all the suggestions here, but they didn't help.

I found another thing to check that fixed it for me. In Visual Studio, right-click on the project and open "Properties". Click on the "Compile" (or "Build") tab and then click on "Advanced Compile Options" at the bottom.

Check the dropdown "Target CPU". It should match the "Platform" you are building. That is, if you are building "Any CPU" then "Target CPU" should say "Any CPU". Go through all of your Platforms by making them active and check this setting.

4
  • 2
    And for those of us just using the compiler, my fix was to add "/platform:x86" to the compiler flags.
    – Urchin
    Apr 18, 2013 at 20:26
  • This fixed it for me as well. I had to adjust the "platform target" on the "Build" tab.
    – Jowen
    Nov 13, 2013 at 13:43
  • if you're on 64 bit, also check the "prefer 32 bit" flag. I had to disable it for me.
    – N4ppeL
    Apr 16, 2019 at 9:58
  • I found that opening the project settings, going to the Build tab and setting General / Platform target: Any CPU worked for me. For some reason I didn't need to do it for all the projects in the solution. I'm using VS2022.
    – Skyfish
    Aug 22, 2023 at 15:27
45

If you are using Any CPU, you might encounter this issue if the Prefer 32-bit option is checked:

Make sure you uncheck this option in the project's property's Build tab!

enter image description here

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  • 3
    It would be helpful if you could indicate where in Visual Studio to find this option.
    – trysis
    Aug 26, 2014 at 14:43
  • @trysis, this option is in the Build page of the project settings pane. Aug 26, 2014 at 16:16
  • 1
    I was saying it would be helpful to put it in. As this answer stands, there is no context to tell the hapless, possibly new user of StackOverflow where to find it.
    – trysis
    Aug 26, 2014 at 16:20
  • What is the path for get this form? I can't find it Oct 1, 2017 at 19:06
  • In Visual Studio, right click the project and choose 'Properties'. Oct 1, 2017 at 19:59
19

In my case I was using a native DLL in C#. This DLL depended on couple of other DLLs that were missing. Once those other DLLs were added everything worked.

1
  • 2
    This answer is hidden between all repeating solution for checking 'target architecture'. This answer should stand out more as it presents a new idea (which lead for my case to the resolution).
    – Stefan
    Jul 6, 2022 at 13:20
10

We had a similar issue and we managed to fix it by setting the Platform target to x86. Project Properties-> build

2
  • So x86 dlls are different from x64? Is there a way to detect this on a referenced dll file?
    – NoBugs
    Nov 1, 2019 at 4:56
  • @NoBugs Looks like you can. Have a look at this thread
    – Joe
    Nov 1, 2019 at 6:14
10
  1. Go to: Tools → Options → Projects and Solutions → Web Projects → Use the 64 bit version of IIS Express.
  2. Change below setting for web service project:

enter image description here

1
  • 1
    Was the simple answer to the problem presented. Worked for me.
    – ransems
    Jul 8, 2020 at 12:31
9

With Visual Studio 2019 I had a similar issue when I wanted to run tests (MSTest directly from VS). In my case I only had an x64 native DLL and I received this error message. First, I thought it is because Visual Studio runs as x86 but this page helped me to solve the issue:

Run unit test as a 64-bit process

It says

  1. Set your projects to Any CPU
  2. Explicitly define processor architecture

I did both (I explicitly set x64) and then my tests started to work.

Set processor architecture explicitly to x64

1
  • Nice one. This is going to help a few people in my department. Now we just have to sort why.
    – ouflak
    May 25, 2021 at 14:10
8

A bit off topic for this post, but searching for this error message brought me here.

If you are building through team system and getting this error, the build definition process tab has a "MSBuild Platform" setting. If this is set to "Auto", you may experience this problem. Changing it to "X86" can also resolve the error.

1
  • this is the closest answer to what i was experiencing. I had a dll that had to be x86. I used it in another project , which was AnyCPU by default. They just need to match. In this case, it didnt make much difference, so I changed the new project to x86.
    – greg
    Jan 24, 2014 at 22:34
4

In my case it was wrong content of the file. DLL was downloaded from the web, but content of the DLL was HTML page :D Try to check if it is binary file, if it seems like correct DLL :)

1
  • Exactly the same 🤣
    – MorganR
    Mar 17, 2023 at 22:48
4

Building on the answer of @paibamboo

He said: Go to: Tools > Options > Projects and Solutions > Web Projects > Use the 64 bit version of IIS Express

My coworker had this box checked (he explicitly looked for it), but had the error message in question. After some hours he unchecked the box and checked it again. Lo and behold: The code now ran with success.

It seems, that there are two places where the state of this box ist saved which became out of sync. Un- and rechecking it synced it again.

Question for more knowledgable users: Was there an update or something last week (for VS 2015) which de-synced the states?

3

Also see this answer, which solved the same problem for me.

Posted by Luis Mack on 5/12/2010 at 8:50 AM I've found the same problem, only for a specific project when compiling on a 64-bit machine. A fix that SEEMS to work is to manually alter one character in the image stream EVERY TIME the usercontrol or form is edited in the designer

 AAEAAAD/////AQAAAAAAAAAMAgAAAFdTeXN0ZW0uV2luZG93cy5Gb3JtcywgVmVyc2lvbj00LjAuMC4w

Change to

 AAEAAAD/////AQAAAAAAAAAMAgAAAFdTeXN0ZW0uV2luZG93cy5Gb3JtcywgVmVyc2lvbj0yLjAuMC4w

That is 00LjAuMC4w back to 0yLjAuMC4w at the end of the line (00 back to 0y)

0
2

In my case, I am using a tiny .exe that reloads the referenced DLLs via Reflection. So I just do these steps which saves my day:

From project properties on solution explorer, at build tab, I choose target platfrom x86

2

In my case, I was running tests through MSTest and found out that I was deploying both a 32-bit and 64-bit DLL to the test directory. The program was favoring the 64-bit DLL and causing it to fail.

TL;DR Make sure you only deploy 32-bit DLLs to tests.

2

I was able to fix this issue by matching my build version to the .NET version on the server.

I double clicked the .exe just to see what would happen and it told me to install 4.5....

So I downgraded to 4.0 and it worked!

So make sure your versions match. It ran on my dev box fine, but server had older .NET version.

2

If you are importing unmanaged DLL then use

CallingConvention = CallingConvention.Cdecl 

in your DLL import method.

1

I got this issue solved in the 'Windows' way. After checking all my settings, cleaning the solution and rebuilding it, I simply close the solution and reopened it. Then it worked, so VS probably didn't get rid of some stuff during cleaning. When logical solutions don't work, I usually turn to illogical (or seemingly illogical) ones. Windows doesn't let me down. :)

1

We were having the same issue in .NET core. The solution was to download 32-bit .netcore runtime, and having your project target x86

In your csproj file add

  <PropertyGroup>
    <PlatformTarget>x86</PlatformTarget>  
  </PropertyGroup>

  <PropertyGroup>
    <RunCommand Condition="'$(PlatformTarget)' == 'x86'">$(MSBuildProgramFiles32)\dotnet\dotnet</RunCommand>    
  </PropertyGroup>

This was used for a Windows machine, you'd have to adjust paths and such for Linux/OSX

0

In my case, I didn't have the correct project set as the start-up project. I went to solution settings and selected the correct startup project and it worked

0

In my case this same error happened after publishing. I had published before with another platform configuration.

The solution was to cleanup the publish folder first, then it worked.

(alternatively set the "delete existing files" option to true)

0

Another reason that may cause this exception, is the C++ Redistributables missing for the target platform of your Dll. I had a tough time finding out when testing on a VM.

0

For .net core, make sure Ijwhost.dll is in the output directory, sometimes it isn't being copied and this will cause the error. See https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/issues/38231 and also https://stackoverflow.com/a/58773266/9665729

0

Please also note that the version of used dll file(s) (in my case "WebView2Loader.dll") which is in use is very crucial. I had almost the same problem with "Microsoft.WebView2.FixedVersionRuntime.101.0.1210.39.x64" when I tried to use the WebView2 component in the MMC Snap-Ins with types of "HTMLView" or "FormView".

I just copied the referenced dll file in a proper path that was accessible for the project (you could just put it beside your project output files first to test it) and then WebView2 browser started to function as expected. Microsoft error messages sometimes (at least in my case) was a little bit misleading and did not convey enough and to the point information.

I received "BadImageFormatException" that normally occurs when you mix platform targets (for example using a dll file compiled in X64 in an application that targeted for x86 or vice versa) or mix native code and .NET but that was not my problem at all. I hope this help one who may stuck in.

0

I also had this issue when I want to call a native DLL from C#/WPA. The below steps work for my project. Properities->Build->Platform target x64/x86(change this option, then works).

0

If you're running a web application project in Visual Studio, then it could be that you're trying to use a 64-bit DLL but IIS Express is running in 32-bit mode. To change that, go to Tools > Options > Projects and Solutions > Web Projects and specify to use 64-bit IIS Express

enter image description here

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