I try to work with DirectoryInfo, FileInfo with very long path.
- I try use \\?\c:\long path (i got illegal caracter with fileInfo and DirectoryInfo)
- I try use file://c:/long path (i got uri not supported)
Can i use ~ in a path or something else.
I read this post but i would like to use another way that call a API. Is it any other solutions ?
There is an article from microsoft for use \\? in file path link text
The question is how can i work with very long path, and DirectoryInfo, and FileInfo for path who are more longer that 256 char
A way I solved this issue in the past was using the library from Delimon called Delimon.Win32.IO. It looks like his site http://www.delimon.be is down at the moment. But I had used it on a project in the past and it worked like a champ. I can try to track it down for you later this evening or just try to find a valid link to it somewhere via google. Cheers. Here's another link talking discussing this issue.
http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/netfxbcl/thread/2541a9b9-acd7-4338-89b1-dfc0408e41b5
Looking at the Long Paths in .NET blog post series, it looks like going to the Win32 API through P/Invoke is the only solution at the moment, other than restructuring your directories so that you don't hit the limit.
The Library is available again on this location.
This is a .NET Library written against .NET Framework 2.0 and can be used to access very long folder and files from a .NET application.
Since the .NET Framework does not support long filenames :-( I had to write a library that calls the WIN32 API and wraps those functions like
System.IO
. While it is not a complete replica of theSystem.IO
it does have most objects and functions available.Delimon.Win32.IO
replaces basic file functions ofSystem.IO
with long path names support for characters up to 32,767 Characters So bye byeMAX_PATH
problemDid you ever run into this problem?
System.IO.PathTooLongException
was unhandled.Message:
The Delimon.Win32.IO Library (V4.0) is also available, it is written against .NET Framework 4.0 and can be used either on x86 & x64 systems.
As of .NET 4.6.2, this issue can be resolved with a change to the local machine's group policy, allowing for long paths on Win 10+ and Server 2016+.
Tested and confirmed.
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/jeremykuhne/2016/07/30/net-4-6-2-and-long-paths-on-windows-10/