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I developed an application that depends on a DLL file. When I debug my application, the applicationwould complain that:

"This application has failed to start because xxx.dll was not found."

So I have to copy the DLL file into the same directory as my .vcproj file.

Is there a way to set the project to look for the DLL file in (preferably) some relative path or (not preferred) some absolute path?

Similar concept to how we set include and library path in the project settings.

I mean when I debug my application (hitting F5) the above error would pop up.

8 Answers 8

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  1. Go to project properties (Alt+F7)
  2. Under Debugging, look to the right
  3. There's an Environment field.
  4. Add your relative path there (relative to vcproj folder) i.e. ..\some-framework\lib by appending PATH=%PATH%;$(ProjectDir)\some-framework\lib or prepending to the path PATH=C:\some-framework\lib;%PATH%
  5. Hit F5 (debug) again and it should work.
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13 Comments

The Environment field takes NAME=VALUE semicolon-delimited pairs. Append to the PATH variable to have the VS Debugger search additional locations for DLLs: PATH=%PATH%;$(ProjectDir)lib
Is there a similar way to do for Release build too?
Alt-F7 brings up a temporary dialog box listing the Active Tool Windows and Active Files (Visual Studio 2017 Community). Is there no way to get to project properties though an old-fashioned menu command? I can't seem to find it.
@SlippD.Thompson Yeah, you're right. But you can achieve the same thing using Alt + p, p instead.
@SlippD.Thompson Ah, reading your comment again, I think I misunderstood what you meant. Yes, I agree. But at least, there are some hotkeys never changed in Visual Studio, and 'Alt + p, p' is one of them. It was there along with 'Alt + F7', which means now something else as you know. Also, 'Alt + p, p' just means 'Project menu > * Properties'.
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12

Go through project properties -> Reference Paths

Then add folder with DLL's

5 Comments

Please don't post identical answers to multiple questions. Post one good answer, then vote/flag to close the other questions as duplicates. If the question is not a duplicate, tailor your answers to the question.
by far the best answer :)
This doesn't seem to be available in Visual Studio 2015 in a C++ project. Which combination of Visual Studio version and project type supports this option?
OP's question was about C++ but this answer is for C#.
I need to use diffrent dlls in debug mode for a specific dll , how can it possible?
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The search path that the loader uses when you call LoadLibrary() can be altered by using the SetDllDirectory() function. So you could just call this and add the path to your dependency before you load it.

See also DLL Search Order.

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7

Another possibility would be to set the Working Directory under the debugging options to be the directory that has that DLL.

Edit: I was going to mention using a batch file to start Visual Studio (and set the PATH variable in the batch file). So then did a bit of searching and see that this exact same question was asked not long ago in this post. The answer suggests the batch file option as well as project settings that apparently may do the job (I did not test it).

2 Comments

what if I depend on 2 dlls, each one lives in its own directory? (i simplified my question above)
I don't think it would be possible to make this solution work for more than a single directory.
7

In your Project properties(Right click on project, click on property button) ▶ Configuration Properties ▶ Build Events ▶ Post Build Events ▶ Command Line.

Edit and add one instruction to command line. for example copy botan.dll from source path to location where is being executed the program.

copy /Y "$(SolutionDir)ProjectDirs\x64\Botan\lib\botan.dll" "$(TargetDir)"

Project Properties

2 Comments

I have no idea if it is right to do that, but the IDE gives me that option and it has been useful, I think it's a good option if I want to copy all the necessary files to another folder to distribute your program. Simple spell but effective. Here in this question there are different answers to reach the same end. But I use this option and avoid many headaches.
The other options didn't work for me, only this one, but it seems like the others should be the right way to go.
0

I had the same problem and my problem had nothing to do with paths. One of my dll-s was written in c++ and it turnes out that if your visual studio doesn't know how to open a dll file it will say that it did not find it. What i did was locate which dll it did not find, than searched for that dll in my directories and opened it in a separate visual studio window. When trying to navigate through Solution explorer of that project, visual studio said that it cannot show what is inside and that i need some extra extensions, so that it can open those files. Surely enough, after installing the recomended extension (in my case something to do with c++) the

"This application has failed to start because xxx.dll was not found."

error miraculously dissapeared.

3 Comments

It would be good to add name of the extension into the answer.
I agree, but as i wrote before, i just installed what visual studio recomended. It was about 4GB of data and since i did not know what was truly neccesary i just installed all of them and did not look closer into every item.
looks like the DLL had a dependency (i.e. requires another DLL) which was not present or at least not on your PATH until you installed VC++.
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Using Visual Studio 2022 the way I prefer to do this is to add the dll as another resource and specify it as "Copy File".

In order to do this Add Existing Item (shift+alt+a or right click in the solution explorer -> Add -> Existing Item) and navigate to the dll. Once the file is added to the solution, edit it's properties by either right click -> Properties or hot key alt+enter. Under Item Type select Copy File.

Now when the solution is built this dll will be automatically copied with the executable. This copying occurs for both debug and release.

Note this is similar to the answer by Joma.

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-1

I know this question had been answered years ago, but for those like me who needed to change where the debugger starts the application, change the command property under Project Properties -> Debugging.

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