Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

Got "The system cannot find the file specified" when I run NETSH from CreateProcess but it works ok on Command Prompt?

I have an NT service that calls a console program written in Delphi 7, let's call it failover.exe that in turn calls NETSH using a procedure I found:

procedure ExecConsoleApp(CommandLine: ansistring; Output, Errors: TStringList); 

Note: ExecConsoleApp uses CreateProcess, see the following link for full code: http://www.delphisources.ru/pages/faq/base/createprocess_console.html

I would pass the following to CommandLine before calling ExecConsoleApp:

cmd.exe /c "C:\Windows\system32\netsh.exe interface delete address "Wireless Network Connection" 192.168.0.36" 

ExecConsoleApp will return an error:

The system cannot find the file specified

But if I were to run it in Command Prompt, it runs perfectly.

The strange thing is that I remembered it working on the first attempt on that 2003 Server, but after that, it failed regardless of the number of times I tried. In one of the attempt, I've also tried assigning logon as administrator user to the service but to no avail. Neither does fiddling with file security help.

I don't have a Win 2003 server to test with in office, but I have tested it on XP and Win7 and ExecConsoleApp works perfectly, although on XP, I had to amend ExecConsoleApp to execute from system32\wbem in order for it work work:

 Res := CreateProcess(nil, PChar(CommandLine), nil, nil, True,
  // **** Attention: Amended by to point current directory to system32\wbem, this is to solve an error returned by netsh.exe if not done otherwise.
 //   CREATE_NEW_CONSOLE or NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS, @env, nil, si, pi);
   CREATE_NEW_CONSOLE or NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS, @env, pchar(GetSystemPath(WindRoot) + 'system32\wbem'), si, pi);

I've researched for a day but no clues, hope someone can help. Thanks.

Additional remarks -

  1. Server is 32 bit Win2k3.

  2. Tried domain administrator, doesn't work.

  3. Code snippets:

    Procedure ExecConsoleApp(CommandLine: ansistring; Output, Errors: TStringList);
      var
        sa: TSECURITYATTRIBUTES;
        si: TSTARTUPINFO;
        pi: TPROCESSINFORMATION;
        hPipeOutputRead: THANDLE;
        hPipeOutputWrite: THANDLE;
        hPipeErrorsRead: THANDLE;
        hPipeErrorsWrite: THANDLE;
        Res, bTest: boolean;
        env: array[0..100] of char;
        szBuffer: array[0..256] of char;
        dwNumberOfBytesRead: DWORD;
        Stream: TMemoryStream;
      begin
        sa.nLength := sizeof(sa);
        sa.bInheritHandle := True;
        sa.lpSecurityDescriptor := nil;
        CreatePipe(hPipeOutputRead, hPipeOutputWrite, @sa, 0);
        CreatePipe(hPipeErrorsRead, hPipeErrorsWrite, @sa, 0);
        ZeroMemory(@env, SizeOf(env));
        ZeroMemory(@si, SizeOf(si));
        ZeroMemory(@pi, SizeOf(pi));
        si.cb := SizeOf(si);
        si.dwFlags := STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW or STARTF_USESTDHANDLES;
        si.wShowWindow := SW_HIDE;
        si.hStdInput := 0;
        si.hStdOutput := hPipeOutputWrite;
        si.hStdError := hPipeErrorsWrite;
    
      (* Remember that if you want to execute an app with no parameters you nil the
         second parameter and use the first, you can also leave it as is with no
         problems.                                                                 *)
        Res := CreateProcess(nil, PChar(CommandLine), nil, nil, True,
        CREATE_NEW_CONSOLE or NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS, @env, nil, si, pi);
    
    
        // Procedure will exit if CreateProcess fail
        if not Res then
        begin
          CloseHandle(hPipeOutputRead);
          CloseHandle(hPipeOutputWrite);
          CloseHandle(hPipeErrorsRead);
          CloseHandle(hPipeErrorsWrite);
          Exit;
        end;
        CloseHandle(hPipeOutputWrite);
        CloseHandle(hPipeErrorsWrite);
    
        //Read output pipe
        Stream := TMemoryStream.Create;
        try
          while True do
          begin
            bTest := ReadFile(hPipeOutputRead, szBuffer, 256, dwNumberOfBytesRead, nil);
            if not bTest then
            begin
              break;
            end;
            OemToAnsi(szBuffer, szBuffer);
            Stream.Write(szBuffer, dwNumberOfBytesRead);
          end;
          Stream.Position := 0;
          Output.LoadFromStream(Stream);
        finally
          Stream.Free;
        end;
    
        //Read error pipe
        Stream := TMemoryStream.Create;
        try
          while True do
          begin
            bTest := ReadFile(hPipeErrorsRead, szBuffer, 256, dwNumberOfBytesRead, nil);
            if not bTest then
            begin
              break;
            end;
            OemToAnsi(szBuffer, szBuffer);
            Stream.Write(szBuffer, dwNumberOfBytesRead);
          end;
          Stream.Position := 0;
          Errors.LoadFromStream(Stream);
        finally
          Stream.Free;
        end;
    
        WaitForSingleObject(pi.hProcess, INFINITE);
        CloseHandle(pi.hProcess);
        CloseHandle(hPipeOutputRead);
        CloseHandle(hPipeErrorsRead);
      end;
    
    
      cmdstring :=
        'cmd.exe /c "' + GetSystemPath(WindRoot) + 'system32\netsh.exe interface ' +
        ip + ' delete address "' + NetworkInterfaceName + '" ' + VirtualFailoverIPAddress + '"';
    
      logstr('cmdstring: ' + cmdstring);
      ExecConsoleApp(cmdstring, OutP, ErrorP);
    
      if OutP.Text <> '' then
      begin
        logstr('Delete IP Result: ' + OutP.Text);
      end
      else
      begin
        logstr('Delete IP Error: ' + ErrorP.Text);
      end;
    
  4. Tried running netsh.exe directly instead of "cmd.exe /c C:\Windows\system32\netsh.exe...", and got the same "The system cannot find the file specified." error. I also accidentally discovered that if I were to issue a wrong netsh command, netsh will actually return an error, e.g.

netsh interface ip delete address "LocalArea Connection" 10.40.201.65

Invalid interface LocalArea Connection specified.

The following is returned if i correct the typo "LocalArea" to "Local Area". netsh interface ip delete address "Local Area Connection" 10.40.201.65

The system cannot find the file specified.

Again, I must repeat that the same command works perfectly fine if I issue it via Command Prompt instead of from my application.

like image 848
Joshua Avatar asked Nov 17 '11 12:11

Joshua


People also ask

How do I run a netsh command on a remote computer?

Using the remote functionality of Netsh You can specify a remote machine you'd like to run the command or script on by inserting the -r option. If necessary, you can also specify login credentials to use for the remote connection: -u for the username of the remote machine and -p for the password.

How do I run netsh on Windows 10?

Use netsh http to query and configure HTTP. sys settings and parameters. If you are using Windows PowerShell on a computer running Windows Server or Windows 10, type netsh and press Enter. At the netsh prompt, type http and press Enter to get the netsh http prompt.

How do I access netsh?

To run a netsh command, you must start netsh from the command prompt by typing netsh and then pressing ENTER. Next, you can change to the context that contains the command you want to use. The contexts that are available depend on the networking components that you have installed.


1 Answers

Have you tried this?

if not CreateProcess(PChar('C:\Windows\system32\netsh.exe'), PChar(Arguments), ...) then
begin
  // Do somehting with `GetLastError`
end;

Of course it would be better to detect the path of C:\Windows\system32 at runtime as this could be on another driver or in another directory.

When you run it this way you can get an error message from Windows using the GetLastError call right after CreateProcess.

The ExecConsoleApp procedure is flawed, because it doesn't return the GetLastError or even any indication that CreateProcess failed.

You should fix this first. Maybe add raise EExecConsoleAppCreateProcessFailed.Create(SysErrorMessage(GetLastError)) before Exit to the code.

You shouldn't use cmd.exe /c as a prefix. It's redundant and it makes error diagnostics more difficult. GetLastError might not reflect the correct error code, because you're delegating the creation of the acutal netsh.exe process to cmd.

like image 138
Jens Mühlenhoff Avatar answered Sep 17 '22 02:09

Jens Mühlenhoff