I have a nagging feeling this may be a duplicate. My apologies if so. I could not turn up another Meta question that discusses this issue. If you know of one, I'll be happy to accept a duplicate suggestion.
There is a class of question that involves machine configuration and cannot be answered without a lot of additional details from the user. For example:
Python and Oracle DB - "Error DPI-1050: Oracle Client library must be at version 11.2 or higher"
This question is going to require a lot of back and forth trying to dig into exactly what binaries the application is finding (if any) and then trying to give the user some way to fix it and ensure the right ones are being found. In short, I don't think this is an appropriate question for SO because it is never going to be self contained enough to give a definitive answer for many readers. The only possible answer I could envision is some sort of community wiki answer where new possible causes and their resolution get added as they are discovered; in other words, a list of things to try.
Is closing the right option for these? What reason would be appropriate if so? Too Broad?
PATH
, which is a first step, but then you need to dig into whether their own software (or any other, like what the user mentions supposedly works) uses some modifiedPATH
or finds the binaries using some other mechanism. Sometimes it involves the fact they're somehow running software under a different set of environment variables. There's too many possibilities. I can't think of a time when diagnosing something like this was straightforward.PATH
directly. .NET can call out to the OS and tell it to load native binaries based on their path, without consideration for thePATH
variable, if some piece of code does so explicitly, which I have some evidence that Oracle client does in some cases. The real answer boils down to, "understand how binaries are found and figure out where the app is finding them, then change something to make those load steps find the right binary before the wrong one."