CeRegCreateKeyEx (RAPI)
This function creates a registry key on a remote Microsoft® Windows® CE–based device. If the key already exists in the registry, this method opens it.
LONG CeRegCreateKeyEx(
HKEY hKey,
LPCWSTR lpszSubKey,
DWORD Reserved,
LPWSTR lpszClass,
DWORD dwOptions,
REGSAM samDesired,
LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES lpSecurityAttributes,
PHKEY phkResult,
LPDWORD lpdwDisposition
);
Parameters
hKey
[in] Handle to a currently open key or one of the following predefined reserved handle values:HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT
HKEY_CURRENT_USER
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE
HKEY_USERS
Windows CE does not support the HKEY_CURRENT_CONFIG, HKEY_PERFORMANCE_DATA, or HKEY_DYN_DATA predefined reserved handle values.
The key opened or created by the CeRegCreateKeyEx function is a subkey of the key identified by the hKey parameter.
lpszSubKey
[in] Pointer to a null-terminated string specifying 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. This subkey must not begin with the backslash character (\). If the parameter is NULL, then RegCreateKeyEx behaves like CeRegOpenKey, where it opens the key specified by hKey. In Windows CE, the maximum length of a key name is 255 characters, not including the terminating NULL character. You can also only nest 16 levels of sub-keys in Windows CE.Reserved
[in] Reserved; set to 0.lpszClass
[in] Pointer to a null-terminated string that specifies the class (object type) of this key. This parameter is ignored if the key already exists. In Windows CE, the maximum length of a class string is 255 characters, not including the terminating NULL character.dwOptions
[in] Ignored; set to 0 to ensure compatibility with future versions of Windows CE.samDesired
[in] Ignored; set to 0 to ensure compatibility with future versions of Windows CE.lpSecurityAttributes
[in] Set to NULL. Windows CE automatically assigns the key a default security descriptor.phkResult
[out] Pointer to a variable that receives a handle to the opened or created key. When you no longer need the returned handle, call the CeRegCloseKey function to close it.lpdwDisposition
[out] Pointer to a variable that receives one of the following disposition values.Value Description REG_CREATED_NEW_KEY The key did not exist and was created. REG_OPENED_EXISTING_KEY The key existed and was simply opened without being changed.
Return Values
ERROR_SUCCESS indicates success. A nonzero error code defined in Winerror.h indicates failure. To get a generic description of the error, call FormatMessage with the FORMAT_MESSAGE_FROM_SYSTEM flag set.
Remarks
The key that the CeRegCreateKeyEx function creates has no values. An application can use the CeRegSetValueEx function to set key values.
CeRegCreateKeyEx can create keys under the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE and HKEY_USERS registries.
An application can use CeRegCreateKeyEx to temporarily lock a portion of the registry. When the locking process creates a new key, it receives the disposition value REG_CREATED_NEW_KEY, indicating that it "owns" the lock. Another process attempting to create the same key receives the disposition value REG_OPENED_EXISTING_KEY, indicating that another process already owns the lock.
Requirements
Pocket PC: Pocket PC 2002 and later
Smartphone: Smartphone 2002 and later
OS Versions: Windows CE 3.0 and later
Header: Rapi.h
Library: Rapi.lib
See Also
Remote API Functions | CeRegDeleteKey
Send Feedback on this topic to the authors