VC++ cl.exe -- DLL not found - visual-studio-2010

I added the bin directory of the VS2010 (not SP1) C++ compiler to my PATH variable on Windows XP. When i try to run it, it tells me that a DLL was not found.
I added this line to my PATH:
C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0\VC\bin;
Update: it still fails when I cd to the bin directory above, and then run the compiler
Can you help me out?

Run the VS command prompt shortcut or the batch file it points to, such as:
"C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0\VC\vcvarsall.bat" x86
to set up an appropriate environment including the path.
By the way, mspdb100.dll lives in C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0\Common7\IDE. But run the shortcut/batch file anyway - it does more than set up the correct path.

add Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0\Common7\IDE to your Path variable, than close cmd prompt and open it. now it will work.

Running the VS command prompt takes care of setting up the environment. Also, ensure that you are running the command prompt as an admin.

Installing Visual Studio 2010 SP1 C++ Compiler Setup fixed this issue for me. Visual Studio 2010 SP1 C++ Compiler install

I faced the same issue when I tried to run a 32 bit exe I built, on a 64 bit machine.
"mspdb100.dll couldn't be found by cl.exe "
Visual Studio 2010(the version I currently use) builds a 32 bit exe by Default.To create a 64 bit executable, just change the setting from Win32 to x64 in the dropdown box at the top of VS and build.This will build for you a 64 bit executable and solve your problem.

Related

Visual Studio Exe App compilation path change

I just want to change the exe file Visual Studio compilation path change
I am doing it like this now. i created a bat file that copied file. I have added visual studio build events. I wonder if there is an easier way.
meanwhile the exe file is being copied to the network drive
I had this problem in a different context (Elixir/Phoenix, Rust), but the root cause was the same: cl.exe could not be found during compilation.
My setup was:
Windows 10, x64
Visual Studio Community 2017 already installed, but only for C# development
For some reason the solution with installing the Visual C++ Build Tools (as #cozzamara suggested) did not work. Stops during installation with some obscure error message. Guess it did not liked my existing Visual Studio installation.
This is how I solved it:
Start up the Visual Studio Installer
Check the Desktop development with C++ (screenshots here)
Execute following command before compiling:
C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2017\Community\VC\Auxiliary\Build\vcvars64.bat
From this on the command cl.exe works. Alternatively (and more conveniently for development) start the application 'Developer Command Prompt for VS 2017' or 'x64 Native Tools Command Prompt VS 2017'.
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I solved the problem by writing code like this in the Post build field, I just ensured that the exe was copied to the field I wanted
COPY $(TargetPath) "\x.x.x.x\ortak\yakup\TestApp.exe"
pause
$(TargetPath) = It gives the location where the exe exited, along with the exe name
"C:\yakup\project\TestApp.exe" like

vcvars64.bat file is missing

I installed visual C++ express from http://www.visualstudio.com/en-us/downloads#d-2010-express. I have also installed Microsoft SDKs http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=8279.
I need the vcvars64.bat for the installation of one of my programs (Gnu Linear Programming Kit or GLPK). Unfortunately, I don't see this file in C:/Program Files (x86)/Visual Studio 10.0/vc. I typed the following command in cmd terminal:
"CALL "C:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.1\Bin\SetEnv.cmd" /x64"
But it does not create the vcvars64.bat file in the intended place.
Can I just download this file from some webpage and put it in C:/Program Files (x86)/Visual Studio 10.0/vc ? Any feedback will be very appreciated.
Thanks,
Nazmul
The file is located in VC/bin/amd64 in the Program Files folder for Visual Studio 2010
Edit: Sorry, I checked with my own 2010 install, which is not an "Express" one. VS2010 Express comes without a 64 bits compiler.
See How to compile a 64-bit application using Visual C++ 2010 Express?

Visual Studio 2012 Command Prompt expected environment pathway not included

Recently installed (and re-installed) VS 2012 Ultimate with Blend
The VS Command Prompt doesn't seem to have a reference (are they called environment pathways) to the folder "C:\WINDOWS\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v4.0.30319\". This means the following lines won't run from the command prompt (either as normal or as administrator)
msbuild buildapp.csproj /t:HelloWorld
Installutil WindowsService1.exe
To use msbuild or Installutil I need to specify the full pathways for the above to run.
Is the above a by design change that MS have made to VS?
In my VS 2012 environment I can find the path you say is missing. I opened the "Developer Command Prompt for VS2012" and did PATH to verify and also ran InstallUtil.exe successfully.
Make sure you open the correct prompt, mine was started using %comspec% /k "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 11.0\Common7\Tools\VsDevCmd.bat"
Here's Microsoft's explanation (err..justification :)) of the convoluted path structure :
For 32 bit builds :
Setting the Path and Environment Variables for Command-Line Builds
.. and 64 bit builds :
How to: Enable a 64-Bit Visual C++ Toolset on the Command Line

Error Code -1073741515 When Using EDITBIN

I'm using EditBin to increase the stack size of an application I'm writing. I have this in the post-build event command line for Visual Studio:
"C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0\VC\bin\editbin.exe" /STACK:268435456 "$(TargetPath)"
When I build my project, I get this error:
Error 470 The command ""C:\Program
Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio
10.0\VC\bin\editbin.exe" /STACK:268435456 "[Target Executable]"" exited
with code -1073741515.
I have both of the following in my PATH environment variable:
C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0\Common7\IDE
C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0\VC\bin
The command also works when I run it manually with cmd.exe. Does anyone know what the problem is here?
I had the same issue, how I resolved it:
Ran msbuild.exe <my.sln> /t:<mytargetproject> from a VS2010 command prompt, where <my.sln> is your solution name and <mytargetproject> is the project you are trying to build. For e.g. msbuild.exe helloworld.sln /t:mainproj.
When you do this or at least when I ran this, a dialog box popped up and said "foo.dll" cannot be found, I added the path of that dll to my "PATH" environment variable and the problem was solved! See ChrisF's comment to the question, as it says, the error is that some dll/component is missing.
From the dll name it complained about, I believe this is not contained to VS2010 libs/dlls, for me it was a third-party dll (which I am using and supposed to be available during the build) it was complaining about.
The best solution is to run the vcvarsall.bat located in the root of the visual studio install folder(C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0\VC). That sets up the search folders for all MSVC compiler related tools.
I got this to work for now by copying mspdb100.dll into the same directory as editbin.exe, but this is not an optimal solution because every developer on my team will need to do the same thing.

nmake, visualstudio, and .mak files

I was given a C++ project that was compiled using MS Visual Studio .net 2003 C++ compiler, and a .mak file that was used to compile it. I am able to build it from the command line using nmake project.mak, but the compiler complains that afxres.h was not found. I did a little searching around and the afxres.h is in the Visual Studio directory in an includes file. Where am I supposed to specify to nmake where to look for this header file?
There should be an icon in your Start menu under Programs that opens a cmd.exe instance with all the correct MSVS environment variables set up for command line building.
Another option is running the appropriate vars batch file from a regular command prompt. The name and location varies from version to version. For VS2003, I believe it's
C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio .NET 2003\Common7\Tools\vsvars32.bat

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