Unmanaged DLLs fail to load on ASP.NET server
This question relates to an ASP.NET website, originally developed in VS 2005 and now in VS 2008.
This website uses two unmanaged external DLLs which are not .NET and I do not have the source code to compile them and have to use them as is.
This website runs fine from within Visual Studio, locating and accessing these external DLLs correctly. However, when the website is published on a webserver (runnning IIS6 and ASP.NET 2.0) rather than the development PC it cannot locate and access these external DLLs, and I get the following error:
Unable to load DLL 'XYZ.dll': The specified module could not be found. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x8007007E)
The external DLLs are located in the bin directory of the website, along with the managed DLLs that wrap them and all the other DLLs for the website.
Searching this problem reveals that many other people seem to have the same problem accessing external non.NET DLLs from ASP.NET websites, but I haven't found a solution that works.
I have tried the following:
Any assistance with this problem would be greatly appreciated!
Try putting the dlls in the System32Inetsrv directory. This is the working directory for IIS on Windows Server.
If this doesn't work try putting the dlls in the System32 directory and the dependency files in the Inetsrv directory.
This happens because the managed dlls get shadow copied to a temporary location under the .NET Framework directory. See http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms366723.aspx for details.
Unfortunately, the unmanaged dlls do NOT get copied and the ASP.NET process won't be able to find them when it needs to load them.
One easy solution is to put the unmanaged dlls in a directory that is in the system path (type "path" at the command line to see the path on your machine) so that they can be found by the ASP.NET process. The System32 directory is always in the path, so putting the unmanaged dlls there always works, but I would recommend adding some other folder to the path and then adding the dlls there to prevent polluting the System32 directory. One big drawback to this method is you have to rename the unmanaged dlls for every version of your application and you can quickly have your own dll hell.
As an alternate to putting the dll in a folder that is already in the path (like system32) you can change the path value in your process by using the following code
System.Environment.SetEnvironmentVariable("Path", searchPath + ";" + oldPath)
Then when LoadLibrary tries to find the unmanaged DLL it will also scan searchPath. This may be preferable to making a mess in System32 or other folders.
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