I'd like to write a debugging/diagnostic tool which can call Windbg functions to examine a dump file, instead of writing a windbg extension. Is this possible and any references?
Thanks a lot.
Rather than WinDbg, you can use the Debugging API which is implemented in dbghelp.dll. It's documented on MSDN. That reference documentation is rather dry, but it should give you an idea of the capabilities of the API. For example, MiniDumpReadDumpStream is the gateway to examining dump files.
In addition to the existing answers, WinDBG is a GUI front end for the DbgEng API. You can use this API to write either WinDBG extensions or other standalone applications. The WinDBG SDK ships with samples of both, an example standalone application can be found in the \sdk\samples\dumpstk subdirectory of your WinDBG install.
For more information, I wrote an article about DbgEng to write extensions here:
http://www.osronline.com/custom.cfm?name=articlePrint.cfm&id=559
Most of that will also apply for how you write a standalone application as it mostly focuses on the programming pattern of the DbgEng interface.
here are some links that use dbgeng interfaces to make standalone executables.
a short summary of the process is to
call DebugCreate() to create a client
call QueryInterFace()
and call one of its methods
http://www.woodmann.com/forum/entry.php?252-Dbgeng-based-handles-(PART-2-)
http://www.woodmann.com/forum/entry.php?246-A-Simple-Dbgeng-Based-User-Mode-Debugger
http://www.woodmann.com/forum/entry.php?248-DbgEng-Based-Debugger-(PART2)
http://www.woodmann.com/forum/entry.php?249-DbgEng-Based-Debugger-(PART2-Contd-)
http://www.woodmann.com/forum/entry.php?250-DbgEng-based-Kernel-Debugger
http://www.woodmann.com/forum/entry.php?251-Dbgeng-based-Handles
You could make commands using powershell or to the command line version of WinDbg which is cdb and then parse the output from cdb which you interpret.
This would be similar notion to piping the output from cdb to your app.
There is post about using powershell in this manner: http://rkeithhill.wordpress.com/2006/08/14/minidump-crash-analysis-with-powershell/
It should be straightforward to pump commands to cdb and interpret the output for specific commands.
Python integrated with dbgeng:
pykd.codeplex.com
This project may be use as a demo for such integration
in the windows SDK there is this file residing in the Lib-directory. Is it possible to use this file with VB6? Google found nothing about it.
If not, in which language (Excep c++) can I use it?
resp. for what is it good for (yes, I know .net winforms)
Thanks regards
Oops
That file provides the COM interface information for the .NET objects that are exposed via COM interop. You can't use it directly, as it only provides the interface information.
I am currently working on a project to perform disk defragmentation in Microsoft Windows environment. For that I want to use the in-built functions of the Windows defragmentation utility. I read somewhere that Windows uses "dfrgres.dll" file to perform defragmentation. So, I want to add "dfrgres.dll" file as a reference in my project. But I am not able to do so. This is the error message which I am getting when I try to add the specified DLL into my project:
"A reference to '...\dfrgres.dll' could not be added. Please make sure that the file is accessible, and that it is a valid assembly or COM component"
Please tell me where the problem is...or is there any other way to do it...??? Are there any other open source resources available over the internet for defragmentation...???
Regards,
Mr. Elusive
There is no dedicated DLL or COM server to perform defrag, the low-level interface uses IOCTL codes to talk to the device driver. Briefly described here.
There's a Microsoft employee blog post that proposes a C# interface. No idea if it still works on later versions of Windows.
First, sorry for my poor English...
I want to add a virtual folder to Windows Explorer using a Namespace Extension (NSE), and I want users to be able to open this virtual folder to explore some path (e.g., c:\test).
How can I do this using Delphi? Thanks.
The place to start is the MSDN documentation: Introduction to the Shell Namespace. Naturally this is written from a C++ perspective but it's not too hard to map that across to Delphi.
Another excellent resource for such tasks is Code Project. For example: The Complete Idiot's Guide to Writing Namespace Extensions - Part I by Mike Dunn. In fact this is just part of an excellent series of articles on shell extensions.
At present Delphi is a poor choice because it does not produce 64 bit executables. This means that your shell extension will not run on 64 bit Windows which is now a serious limitation.
With the recent release of Delphi XE2 this limitation has been removed. XE2 is capable of producing 64 bit executables and can therefore be used to produce 64 bit shell extensions.
Basically a shell extension is a COM object that implements a set of interfaces. Which interfaces needs to be implemented depends on the type of the extension (there are some used by any extension, of course).
You can start reading here (you need some C -> Delphi translation, but when you start to work on such matters is better you get prepared to it), and then the reference is of course MSDN
http://www.shellplus.com/examples/namespace-extension-example.html
http://delphipower.tripod.com/winshell.htm
I want a small (< 30MB) standalone Windows executable (a single file) that creates a window which asks the user for the location of a directory and then launches a different program in that directory.
This executable has to run on XP, Vista, Server 2003, and Server 2008 versions of Windows in 32-bits and 64 bits on x86-64 architecture as well as Itanium chips.
It would be spectacular if we only had to build it once in order to run it on all these platforms, but that is not a requirement. This is for a proprietary system, so GPL code is off-limits.
What is the fastest way to put this together?
These are some things I'm looking into, so if you have info about their viability, I'm all about it:
Perl/Tk using perl2exe to get the binary.
Ruby with wxruby
Learn MFC programming and do it the right way like everybody else.
What about a WSH script? It won't be an exe, right, but to ask for a folder I don't see the need for an exe file, much less a 30Mb one...
A 1Kb script, save it as whatever name you like with vbs extension and run it. This, in case it's not clear, asks you for a folder name and then runs calc.exe from the system32 subdirectory. You can of course do a lot better than this in 2 or 4 Kb.
Set WshShell = WScript.CreateObject("WScript.Shell")
win = InputBox("Please type your Windows folder location.")
If Right(win,1) <> "\" Then
win = win & "\"
End If
WshShell.Run win & "system32\calc.exe"
To add a Folder Browser dialog instead of an InputBox, check this out.
Clear benefits are:
Simplicity (well, VB is ugly, but you can use JScript if you prefer), no need to compile it!
Compatibility, works on every windows machine I have available (from 98 onwards)
I'd use .NET and WinForms. The idea of scripted solution is appealing, but in practice I often find you end up jumping through hoops to do anything beyond the basic case and still don't have the flexibility to do everything you want.
Quickest way on Windows for a lightweight and fast GUI? One word.. Delphi! It lacks the 64 bit support for now but then FreePascal would come to the rescue.
Having a small stand-alone application and developing it quickly are, I'm sorry to say, usually conflicting requirements.
To be honest, given how incredibly simple the application is, I would write it in C with direct Win32 calls: one call to SHBrowseForFolder() to get the directory, and one to ShellExecuteEx() to run the program. Even MFC is far too heavy-weight for such a modest application. Set the C runtime to be statically linked and you should be able to keep the size of the stand-alone executable to less than 100k. A decent Windows C coder should be able to knock that up in less than an hour, assuming you have one to hand.
Python with either wxWidgets or Tkinter should be able to do this with almost no effort at all. Runs on everything, and py2exe will get you a standalone executable.
Tcl/tk is one solution. You can have a single file executable (including custom images, dlls, etc) using something called a "starpack" -- a virtual filesystem that is both tcl interpreter and application code. I think it would weigh in at maybe a couple megabytes.
From your specifications it would take me personally maybe 15 minutes to get a first working version.
Tcl/Tk has a BSD license.
For all of its flaws, Visual Basic has historically been great for super-simple apps like this.
I agree with the Tcl/Tk answer above. For more information about the starpack that he refers to, see: http://www.equi4.com/tclkit/ it's a Tcl/Tk interpreter available for various OS's all in about 1MB. In the past there apparently has been concerned about the look and feel of Tcl/Tk UI's, but this has been addressed by a new framework named "Tile" that supports the native look and feel of the user's OS.
For a quick and dirty GUI program like you said, you can use an AutoIt script. You can even compile to an exe.
For an GUI example of AutoIt, you can check my stdout redirect script in a previous answer here
wxWidgets; it's cross platform, free, open source and easy to learn
You could do this in MFC and have an executable in under 100k. In general, if you want to keep the size of your executables down, you can use UPX to perform exe compression. If you want an example, take a look at uTorrent. It's a full featured BitTorrent app in less than 300k of executable.
I use HTA (HTML Application) for quick-and-dirty form & script applications. See Microsoft's HTA Developers Center for details and examples. This basically uses HTML for the form, and any HTML-accessible scripting language for the script. Normal browser security is bypassed so that you can get at almost all OS internals. The above site also contains links to several tools that nearly automate the scripting part for you.
PyQt works really well for this. Binaries for Windows here:
http://www.riverbankcomputing.co.uk/software/pyqt/download
A good book here:
http://www.amazon.com/Programming-Python-Prentice-Software-Development/dp/0132354187/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1295369454&sr=8-1
And you can freeze these using various methods if you need exe(s).
Similar to what Vinko Vrsalovic said, you can use a HTA application. It is as easy as building a webpage with windows scripting host functionality. I have built a few utilities with jscript and it is really easy and quick
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms536496(VS.85).aspx
These responses are unbelievable.
Visual Studio Forms editor lets you draw out WinForms and autogenerates the boilerplate GUI code (which is a pain in the ass at best for most other languages and toolkits). Then you can use C# or any other .NET language. .NET has stock widgets for file pickers. I could write that script in 20 minutes and it will run on every one of your target platforms for free. Draw out the GUI, drag-n-drop a file picker, fill out maybe two hooks to do the "launch a different file than they wanted" thing, done.
I suggest Autohotkey (AHK) or Autoit. Both support win95+ (with caveats for certain functions). They can be compiled into small .exe without external dependency (besides native DLL's).
Pros:
small size
easy to write code
useful for simple - complex operations
can create GUI easily
Cons:
learning curve (as syntax is unusual)
30MB is pretty huge!
Qt (C++) may be the best choice. It is portable, quick to develop and relatively fast to run. With UPX (Ultimate Packer for eXecutables) your program will be 10M+.
Qt (Python) is OK too, but will be slower.
If you want it less than 1M and/or you want it quick, you can write it in C with win32 api, or use Delphi.