84

I need to get the product version and file version for a DLL or EXE file using Win32 native APIs in C or C++. I'm not looking for the Windows version, but the version numbers that you see by right-clicking on a DLL file, selecting "Properties", then looking at the "Details" tab. This is usually a four-part dotted version number x.x.x.x.

4
  • Which language are you using? Commented Jun 2, 2009 at 17:12
  • GetFileVersionInfo() Commented Jun 2, 2009 at 17:13
  • 7
    Doesn't matter if he just wants Win32 API calls. Any language that supports calling system DLLs should be fine.
    – crashmstr
    Commented Jun 2, 2009 at 17:15
  • Edited to clarify that this is about C/C++. Commented Jun 2, 2009 at 17:27

5 Answers 5

116

You would use the GetFileVersionInfo API.

See Using Version Information on the MSDN site.

Sample:

DWORD  verHandle = 0;
UINT   size      = 0;
LPBYTE lpBuffer  = NULL;
DWORD  verSize   = GetFileVersionInfoSize( szVersionFile, &verHandle);

if (verSize != NULL)
{
    LPSTR verData = new char[verSize];

    if (GetFileVersionInfo( szVersionFile, verHandle, verSize, verData))
    {
        if (VerQueryValue(verData,"\\",(VOID FAR* FAR*)&lpBuffer,&size))
        {
            if (size)
            {
                VS_FIXEDFILEINFO *verInfo = (VS_FIXEDFILEINFO *)lpBuffer;
                if (verInfo->dwSignature == 0xfeef04bd)
                {

                    // Doesn't matter if you are on 32 bit or 64 bit,
                    // DWORD is always 32 bits, so first two revision numbers
                    // come from dwFileVersionMS, last two come from dwFileVersionLS
                    TRACE( "File Version: %d.%d.%d.%d\n",
                    ( verInfo->dwFileVersionMS >> 16 ) & 0xffff,
                    ( verInfo->dwFileVersionMS >>  0 ) & 0xffff,
                    ( verInfo->dwFileVersionLS >> 16 ) & 0xffff,
                    ( verInfo->dwFileVersionLS >>  0 ) & 0xffff
                    );
                }
            }
        }
    }
    delete[] verData;
}
9
  • 3
    int revision = HIWORD(verInfo->dwProductVersionLS); int build = LOWORD(verInfo->dwProductVersionLS); Commented Dec 2, 2013 at 23:49
  • 9
    I know it has been a while, but for newbies like me this is how you get the .exe filename: TCHAR szVersionFile[MAX_PATH]; GetModuleFileName(NULL, szVersionFile, MAX_PATH ); Commented Sep 5, 2014 at 18:36
  • 1
    @BurninatorDor Don't call yourself a newbie. I've been programming in MFC for 6 years thus far, and this helped me.
    – Neil
    Commented Sep 11, 2014 at 9:33
  • 2
    edited this answer because it was calculating the version numbers wrong. From the MSDN docs for dwProductVersionMS: "The most significant 32 bits of the file's binary version number. This member is used with dwFileVersionLS to form a 64-bit value used for numeric comparisons." , so you use both of them to calculate the version number. First two (major / minor) are in versionMS and last two (revision / build) are in versionLS. It doesn't matter if you are in 32/64 bit, DWORD is always 32 bits.
    – mgrandi
    Commented Nov 12, 2014 at 0:28
  • 1
    NULL should not be used with DWORDs (0 would be correct instead)
    – M.M
    Commented Mar 10, 2017 at 9:32
23

All these solutions did not work properly (with my system). I found out that each of the four parts of the version number are saved as a 16-bit value.

The first two numbers are saved in the 32-bit DWORD dwFileVersionMS, and the second two in dwFileVersionLS. So I edited your code at the output section like this:

    TRACE( "File Version: %d.%d.%d.%d\n",
        ( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionMS >> 16 ) & 0xffff,
        ( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionMS >>  0 ) & 0xffff,
        ( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionLS >> 16 ) & 0xffff,
        ( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionLS >>  0 ) & 0xffff
        );

And it works perfectly. The output is formatted like on my system:

major.minor.build.revision

1
  • How to get file version for MSI files, GetFileVersionInfoSize giving error 1812? Commented Feb 18, 2022 at 6:50
20

You get this information using the version information APIs. Here is a sample:

void PrintFileVersion( TCHAR *pszFilePath )
{
    DWORD               dwSize              = 0;
    BYTE                *pbVersionInfo      = NULL;
    VS_FIXEDFILEINFO    *pFileInfo          = NULL;
    UINT                puLenFileInfo       = 0;

    // Get the version information for the file requested
    dwSize = GetFileVersionInfoSize( pszFilePath, NULL );
    if ( dwSize == 0 )
    {
        printf( "Error in GetFileVersionInfoSize: %d\n", GetLastError() );
        return;
    }

    pbVersionInfo = new BYTE[ dwSize ];

    if ( !GetFileVersionInfo( pszFilePath, 0, dwSize, pbVersionInfo ) )
    {
        printf( "Error in GetFileVersionInfo: %d\n", GetLastError() );
        delete[] pbVersionInfo;
        return;
    }

    if ( !VerQueryValue( pbVersionInfo, TEXT("\\"), (LPVOID*) &pFileInfo, &puLenFileInfo ) )
    {
        printf( "Error in VerQueryValue: %d\n", GetLastError() );
        delete[] pbVersionInfo;
        return;
    }

    // pFileInfo->dwFileVersionMS is usually zero. However, you should check
    // this if your version numbers seem to be wrong

    printf( "File Version: %d.%d.%d.%d\n",
        ( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionLS >> 24 ) & 0xff,
        ( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionLS >> 16 ) & 0xff,
        ( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionLS >>  8 ) & 0xff,
        ( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionLS >>  0 ) & 0xff
        );

    // pFileInfo->dwProductVersionMS is usually zero. However, you should check
    // this if your version numbers seem to be wrong.

    printf( "Product Version: %d.%d.%d.%d\n",
        ( pFileInfo->dwProductVersionLS >> 24 ) & 0xff,
        ( pFileInfo->dwProductVersionLS >> 16 ) & 0xff,
        ( pFileInfo->dwProductVersionLS >>  8 ) & 0xff,
        ( pFileInfo->dwProductVersionLS >>  0 ) & 0xff
        );

    delete[] pbVersionInfo;
}
2
  • 3
    I think this is wrong. for file version 1.0.0.1 this function gives me "0.0.0.1". I ended up @Vasya 's answer
    – liorda
    Commented Mar 18, 2013 at 10:20
  • 1
    There is a memory leak. pbVersionInfo is not released at the end of the function. Commented May 12, 2022 at 9:04
5

This code shows the file version numbers correctly.

( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionMS >> 16 ) & 0xff,
( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionMS >> 0 ) & 0xff,
( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionLS >>  16 ) & 0xff,
( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionLS >>  0 ) & 0xff);
4
  • 4
    Can you provide some context to this answer? It seems to be incomplete. If it was a correction to another answer, please leave a comment on it, or edit that answer and it will be approved by a more experianced user.
    – Deanna
    Commented Oct 16, 2012 at 8:00
  • 1
    this will definitely not work correctly, if the version includes any component greater than 255, e.g. 6.1.3709.2 The four components are 16-bit numbers, not 8-bit.
    – Spike0xff
    Commented Nov 23, 2016 at 2:39
  • This is not correct. The individual parts of the versions are 16-bit values. The code should be ( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionMS >> 16 ) & 0xffff, ( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionMS >> 0 ) & 0xffff, ( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionLS >> 16 ) & 0xffff, ( pFileInfo->dwFileVersionLS >> 0 ) & 0xffff); Commented Apr 11, 2020 at 16:56
  • As it was a long time ago !!! But I can share the solution. I then refused to receive information about executable files from the kernel driver. I then transferred this function to the service. The driver transmitted information about the start of the process and expected a resolution from the service
    – Vasya
    Commented Apr 12, 2020 at 19:44
4

The easiest way is to use the GetFileVersionInfoEx or GetFileVersionInfo API functions.

You can also do it from within your application resources as explained here.

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