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Interface Key (Windows CE 5.0)

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This key registers new interfaces by associating an interface name with an interface ID (IID). The named values are stored under the following registry key:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\Interface

If your application adds a new interface, the Interface key must be completed for OLE 2 to register the new interface. There must be one IID subkey for each new interface.

Note   You must use ProxyStubCLSID32 because the IID-to-CLSID mapping may be different for 16-and 32-bit interfaces. The IID-to-CLSID depends on the way the interface proxies are packaged into a set of proxy DLLs.

The following table shows the named values for the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\Interface key.

Value : type Description
\<IID> = name of interface Provides the textual name for a given interface. For example:
\{00000112-0000-0000-C000-0000000000-46} = IOleObject

If your application adds a new interface, the interface key must be completed for OLE 2 to register the new interface. There must be one entry for each new interface.

\BaseInterface = <name of interface> Identifies the interface from which the current interface is derived.
\NumMethods = <number of methods> Contains the number of interfaces in the associated interface.
\ProxyStubClsid32 = <CLSID> Maps an IID to a CLSID in 32-bit proxy DLLs.

This is a required entry because the IID-to-CLSID mapping may be different for 16- and 32-bit interfaces. The IID-to-CLSID mapping depends on the way the interface proxies are packaged into a set of proxy DLLs.

If you add interfaces, you must use this entry to register them (32-bit systems) so that OLE can find the appropriate remoting code to establish interprocess communication.

See Also

COM and DCOM Registry Settings | COM and DCOM Security | Component Services (COM and DCOM) | Enhancing the Security of a Device

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