David,

Thanks for getting back to me. Sorry it took so long to reply as I
have been on vacation for the past week.  We are using .bat files.
one thing i noticed is that this only happens when there is more than
one task in the project.  Seems like that should not be the case.

Thanks,
David

On Mar 28, 1:18 am, David Cameron <[email protected]> wrote:
> I just played around at the command-line, and both versions set the correct
> ERRORLEVEL, at least on Windows7 Pro. It may be an issue in the way the .net
> framework starts processes? I noticed there isn't any special handling for
> .bat or .cmd files. Actually, which extension is your batch file using .bat
> or .cmd?
>
> Dave
>
> On 28 March 2010 02:06, rdbossjr <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Craig,
>
> > Thanks for looking at it.  I will be looking at the set statements
> > next week. My question is why would it work fine without the /B but
> > not work with the /B?
>
> > I'll let you know what I find.
>
> > David
>
> > On Mar 25, 9:41 pm, "Craig Sutherland" <[email protected]>
> > wrote:
> > > Hi David,
>
> > > I've had a quick look into this, and it appears there is something weird
> > > happening with the batch file execution. Using the following batch file I
> > > can replicate your issue you mentioned:
> > > @ECHO OFF
> > > Whatthe --> This doesn't exist, just need an error level
> > > SET BUILDFAILED = %ERRORLEVEL%
> > > ECHO Doing something
> > > EXIT /B %BUILDFAILED%
>
> > > With this batch file, CC.NET gets an error code of 0 and thinks
> > everything
> > > is ok.
>
> > > Now, if I remove the spaces from the SET command, it returns the
> > ERRORLEVEL:
> > > @ECHO OFF
> > > Whatthe --> This doesn't exist, just need an error level
> > > SET BUILDFAILED=%ERRORLEVEL%
> > > ECHO Doing something
> > > EXIT /B %BUILDFAILED%
>
> > > With this version, CC.NET gets the error code (9009) and fails (as
> > > expected!)
>
> > > Based on this, I'm guessing you have some spaces in one of your set
> > > statements which means CMD is not setting the value correctly (??)
>
> > > Craig-----Original Message-----
> > > From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
> > On
>
> > > Behalf Of rdbossjr
> > > Sent: Thursday, 25 March 2010 2:49 a.m.
> > > To: ccnet-user
> > > Subject: [ccnet-user] /B on EXIT statement in batch files
>
> > > Hello,
>
> > > I have recently added the /B to my EXIT statements in my build batch
> > files.
> > > So my Exit statements look like this:
>
> > > EXIT /B %BUILDFAILED%
>
> > > where %BUILDFAILED% is set to %ERRORLEVEL% from several process
> > throughout
> > > the batch file.
>
> > > As a result of adding /B my CCNet projects are now green when they should
> > be
> > > red.  This is the only thing that I changed in the batch files.  When I
> > > remove the /B from the EXIT statements the builds go back to being red.
>
> > > This is not a show stopper but it is annoying because I now cannot
> > combine
> > > these build scripts by calling them from other batch files if I want
> > those
> > > batch files to continue after a failure returns from one of the build
> > > scripts.
>
> > > Any ideas?
>
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> > words
> > > "REMOVE ME" as the subject.
>
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