RegCreateKeyEx Function

Creates the specified registry key. If the key already exists, the function opens it. Note that key names are not case sensitive.

To perform transacted registry operations on a key, call the RegCreateKeyTransacted function.

Syntax

C++
LONG WINAPI RegCreateKeyEx(
  __in        HKEY hKey,
  __in        LPCTSTR lpSubKey,
  __reserved  DWORD Reserved,
  __in_opt    LPTSTR lpClass,
  __in        DWORD dwOptions,
  __in        REGSAM samDesired,
  __in_opt    LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES lpSecurityAttributes,
  __out       PHKEY phkResult,
  __out_opt   LPDWORD lpdwDisposition
);

Parameters

hKey [in]

A handle to an open registry key. The calling process must have KEY_CREATE_SUB_KEY access to the key. For more information, see Registry Key Security and Access Rights.

This handle is returned by the RegCreateKeyEx or RegOpenKeyEx function, or it can be one of the following predefined keys:

HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT
HKEY_CURRENT_CONFIG
HKEY_CURRENT_USER
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE
HKEY_USERS
lpSubKey [in]

The name of a subkey that this function opens or creates. The subkey specified must be a subkey of the key identified by the hKey parameter; it can be up to 32 levels deep in the registry tree. For more information on key names, see Structure of the Registry.

This parameter cannot be NULL.

Reserved

This parameter is reserved and must be zero.

lpClass [in, optional]

The user-defined class type of this key. This parameter may be ignored. This parameter can be NULL.

dwOptions [in]

This parameter can be one of the following values.

ValueMeaning
REG_OPTION_BACKUP_RESTORE
0x00000004L

If this flag is set, the function ignores the samDesired parameter and attempts to open the key with the access required to backup or restore the key. If the calling thread has the SE_BACKUP_NAME privilege enabled, the key is opened with the ACCESS_SYSTEM_SECURITY and KEY_READ access rights. If the calling thread has the SE_RESTORE_NAME privilege enabled, the key is opened with the ACCESS_SYSTEM_SECURITY and KEY_WRITE access rights. If both privileges are enabled, the key has the combined access rights for both privileges. For more information, see Running with Special Privileges.

REG_OPTION_CREATE_LINK
0x00000002L

This key is a symbolic link. The target path is assigned to the L"SymbolicLinkValue" value of the key. The target path must be an absolute registry path.

Registry symbolic links should be used only when absolutely necessary for application compatibility.

REG_OPTION_NON_VOLATILE
0x00000000L

This key is not volatile; this is the default. The information is stored in a file and is preserved when the system is restarted. The RegSaveKey function saves keys that are not volatile.

REG_OPTION_VOLATILE
0x00000001L

All keys created by the function are volatile. The information is stored in memory and is not preserved when the corresponding registry hive is unloaded. For HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, this occurs when the system is shut down. For registry keys loaded by the RegLoadKey function, this occurs when the corresponding RegUnLoadKey is performed. The RegSaveKey function does not save volatile keys. This flag is ignored for keys that already exist.

 

samDesired [in]

A mask that specifies the access rights for the key. For more information, see Registry Key Security and Access Rights.

lpSecurityAttributes [in, optional]

A pointer to a SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES structure that determines whether the returned handle can be inherited by child processes. If lpSecurityAttributes is NULL, the handle cannot be inherited.

The lpSecurityDescriptor member of the structure specifies a security descriptor for the new key. If lpSecurityAttributes is NULL, the key gets a default security descriptor. The ACLs in a default security descriptor for a key are inherited from its direct parent key.

phkResult [out]

A pointer to a variable that receives a handle to the opened or created key. If the key is not one of the predefined registry keys, call the RegCloseKey function after you have finished using the handle.

lpdwDisposition [out, optional]

A pointer to a variable that receives one of the following disposition values.

ValueMeaning
REG_CREATED_NEW_KEY
0x00000001L

The key did not exist and was created.

REG_OPENED_EXISTING_KEY
0x00000002L

The key existed and was simply opened without being changed.

 

If lpdwDisposition is NULL, no disposition information is returned.

Return Value

If the function succeeds, the return value is ERROR_SUCCESS.

If the function fails, the return value is a nonzero error code defined in Winerror.h. You can use the FormatMessage function with the FORMAT_MESSAGE_FROM_SYSTEM flag to get a generic description of the error.

Remarks

The key that the RegCreateKeyEx function creates has no values. An application can use the RegSetValueEx function to set key values.

An application cannot create a key that is a direct child of HKEY_USERS or HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE. An application can create subkeys in lower levels of the HKEY_USERS or HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE trees.

If your service or application impersonates different users, do not use this function with HKEY_CURRENT_USER. Instead, call the RegOpenCurrentUser function.

Note that operations that access certain registry keys are redirected. For more information, see Registry Virtualization and 32-bit and 64-bit Application Data in the Registry.

Requirements

Minimum supported clientWindows 2000 Professional
Minimum supported serverWindows 2000 Server
HeaderWinreg.h (include Windows.h)
LibraryAdvapi32.lib
DLLAdvapi32.dll
Unicode and ANSI namesRegCreateKeyExW (Unicode) and RegCreateKeyExA (ANSI)

See Also

RegCloseKey
RegDeleteKey
Registry Functions
Registry Overview
RegOpenKeyEx
RegSaveKey
SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES

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Build date: 10/8/2009

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Community Content

Thomas Lee
lpSubKey length limit

http192I don't know how the function behaves with long lpSubKey values and I do not have the time to test it now, but according to http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms724844.aspx the maximum size of a key name is 255 characters, although I could create keys with names of 256 characters with command line reg tool:

reg add "HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Microsoft SQL Server\MSSQL.1\MSSearch\Filters\.ŮEiYkITcŁQčžoRiBZiěĂŠjuEŐBŠEůó6mnRDŢúďÁjřSĽCSkxDI6iguAXëiRIoKb‘mAoLN0Ťpĺü2IqżuŮMHuúlrOLG5muQHÓUJHCMNThčwZC|7RXFlKSdé8Ř0lÓFWBJOy5Ţf4ž9mŘc9UNµCqâGŘűÚgáRDs3PPŇ9goůMtoyIn9łU5IOR1č1IOŘhHÖCżZyÎlűYŰ0aŹoPILigV0guţlTężH6VşIůHŻäiZI06łhPűsfijőÖoUüióTű3ŘSeŁ8zuiiYżFdš" /ve /d {C7310720-AC80-11D1-8DF3-00C04FB6EF4F} /f

RegEdit had a limit somewhere lower than 250 characters.

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Stanley Roark
UNICODE in Registry?

I think we can't embed UNICODE in to registry. Can we???

reg add "HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Microsoft SQL Server\MSSQL.1\MSSearch\Filters\.ŮEiYkITcŁQčžoRiBZiěĂŠjuEŐBŠEůó6mnRDŢúďÁjřSĽCSkxDI6iguAXëiRIoKb‘mAoLN0Ťpĺü2IqżuŮMHuúlrOLG5muQHÓUJHCMNThčwZC|7RXFlKSdé8Ř0lÓFWBJOy5Ţf4ž9mŘc9UNµCqâGŘűÚgáRDs3PPŇ9goůMtoyIn9łU5IOR1č1IOŘhHÖCżZyÎlűYŰ0aŹoPILigV0guţlTężH6VşIůHŻäiZI06łhPűsfijőÖoUüióTű3ŘSeŁ8zuiiYżFdš" /ve /d {C7310720-AC80-11D1-8DF3-00C04FB6EF4F} /f

Tags : sai satish

Gideon7
RegCreateKeyEx creates intermedidate keys
Note: RegCreateKeyEx("woz\foo\baz") will create the ancestor keys "woz" and "foo" if they do not exist. This means that if (for example) an .MSI installer file contains a typo for an ancestor key it will inadvertently create a whole new branch.
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