STARTUPINFO si;
PROCESS_INFORMATION pi;
memset(&si, 0, sizeof(si));
memset(&pi, 0, sizeof(pi));
si.cb = sizeof(si);
LPCWSTR procName =(LPCWSTR)"D:\\test dir 1\\Calc.exe";
LPWSTR procArg =(LPWSTR)"blacknull";
if(CreateProcess(procName,procArg,0,0,0,CREATE_DEFAULT_ERROR_MODE,0,0,&si,&pi))
{
//do some work
}
printf( "CreateProcess failed (%d).\n", GetLastError());
system("Pause");
It keeps throwing Error(2)-> The System cannot find the file specified
.
I don't know what's wrong. I also tried to use "Calc.exe" which in the same Dir. but it's not working.
You use the L
prefix to make a wide character string:
L"D:\\test dir 1\\Calc.exe";
Casting a string literal to a different character width does not make a string wider.
In addition to the string type issue already pointed out, the second argument (lpCommandLine) must point to a writable buffer, not a constant string. You can do this by declaring it as follows:
WCHAR procArg[] = L"blacknull";
This is documented in MSDN: "The Unicode version of this function, CreateProcessW, can modify the contents of this string. Therefore, this parameter cannot be a pointer to read-only memory (such as a const variable or a literal string). If this parameter is a constant string, the function may cause an access violation."