Hi all, I observed a program that was bailing out with an absolutely baffling error message. I have traced it to its cause, but now I'm stuck. Basically, it was telling me that it had an error in FindNextFile of "success". I did a relay trace and found out that it was calling FindFirstFile, FindNextFile a bunch of times, FindClose, and then GetLastError. So, I put together a little test: #include <windows.h> #include <stdio.h> WIN32_FIND_DATA fd; HANDLE h; int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { h = FindFirstFile("*", &fd); if (h == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) { printf("Error finding first file: %d\n", GetLastError()); return 1; } printf("found file: %s\n", fd.cFileName); while (FindNextFile(h, &fd)) { printf("found file: %s\n", fd.cFileName); } FindClose(h); switch (GetLastError()) { case ERROR_NO_MORE_FILES: printf("all done!\n"); return 0; default: printf("Error finding next file: %d\n", GetLastError()); return 1; } return 1; } Now, on Windows, the output is: G:\testfnf>testfnf found file: . found file: .. found file: testfnf.cpp found file: testfnf.exe all done! And with Wine the output is: [ajp(a)toaster testfnf]$ ~/wine/wine testfnf.exe found file: . found file: .. found file: testfnf.cpp found file: testfnf.exe Error finding next file: 0 So, it looks like somewhere in FindClose Wine is resetting the last error. I started digging through there and the functions it calls but I was unable to find where it was getting reset. Can anyone shed some light on this? Is there any way to break on that value changing? Thanks, -ajp