Reported by nightstrike, who also tested this patch.

On Windows, we call system() which works as described at
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/c-runtime-library/reference/system-wsystem?view=msvc-170

Namely, it only fails with "-1" if the command interpreter
could not be started. Otherwise, it has the return value.
(Same on Linux.) On POSIX systems, 'sh' calls exit(127) or
_exit(127) if it cannot execute the program of the passed string,
as documented. Cf. https://www.unix.com/man-page/posix/3p/system/

Thus, the question is what happens on Windows. Our experiments, several
webpages (like stackoverflow) and the source code of WINE for cmd.exe indicate
that Windows returns 9009 in that case. See for instance
https://github.com/wine-mirror/wine/blob/master/programs/cmd/wcmdmain.c#L1262-L1269

Thus, we now do likewise. The code is for MINGW; Cygwin does not set that that
var and is likely to use return values closer to POSIX.

OK for mainline?

Tobias
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libfortran: Fix execute_command_line for Windows

On Windows, 'system' is called - that fails with -1 if the command
interpreter could not be started; on POSIX systems, if the child
process could not be started by the shell, exit(127)/_exit(127) is
called/returned. On Windows, cmd.exe (and also the PowerShell) return
errorlevel 9009.

libgfortran/ChangeLog:

	* intrinsics/execute_command_line.c (execute_command_line): On
	Windows, regard system()'s return value of 9009 as EXEC_INVALIDCOMMAND.

diff --git a/libgfortran/intrinsics/execute_command_line.c b/libgfortran/intrinsics/execute_command_line.c
index 305f067d973..0d1688400c2 100644
--- a/libgfortran/intrinsics/execute_command_line.c
+++ b/libgfortran/intrinsics/execute_command_line.c
@@ -142,10 +142,15 @@ execute_command_line (const char *command, bool wait, int *exitstat,
 #endif
       else if (res == 127 || res == 126
 #if defined(WEXITSTATUS) && defined(WIFEXITED)
 	       || (WIFEXITED(res) && WEXITSTATUS(res) == 127)
 	       || (WIFEXITED(res) && WEXITSTATUS(res) == 126)
+#endif
+#ifdef __MINGW32__
+		  /* cmd.exe sets the errorlevel to 9009,
+		     if the command could not be executed.  */
+		|| res == 9009
 #endif
 	       )
 	/* Shell return codes 126 and 127 mean that the command line could
 	   not be executed for various reasons.  */
 	set_cmdstat (cmdstat, EXEC_INVALIDCOMMAND);

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