Function std.process.execve
Replaces the current process by executing a command, pathname, with
    the arguments in argv.
						
				int execve
				(
				
				  const(string) pathname,
				
				  const(string[]) argv,
				
				  const(string[]) envp
				
				);
				
				
				int execve
				(
				
				  const(string) pathname,
				
				  const(string[]) argv,
				
				  const(string[]) envp
				
				);
						
					
				This function is Posix-Only.
    Typically, the first element of argv is
    the command being executed, i.e. argv[0] == pathname. The 'p'
    versions of exec search the PATH environment variable for     pathname. The 'e' versions additionally take the new process'
    environment variables as an array of strings of the form key=value.
Does not return on success (the current process will have been replaced). Returns -1 on failure with no indication of the underlying error.
Windows specific
These functions are only supported on POSIX platforms, as the Windows
    operating systems do not provide the ability to overwrite the current
    process image with another. In single-threaded programs it is possible
    to approximate the effect of execv* by using spawnProcess
    and terminating the current process once the child process has returned.
    For example:
auto commandLine = [ "program", "arg1", "arg2" ];
version (Posix)
{
    execv(commandLine[0], commandLine);
    throw new Exception("Failed to execute program");
}
else version (Windows)
{
    import core    This is, however, NOT equivalent to POSIX' execv*.  For one thing, the
    executed program is started as a separate process, with all this entails.
    Secondly, in a multithreaded program, other threads will continue to do
    work while the current thread is waiting for the child process to complete.
    A better option may sometimes be to terminate the current program immediately
    after spawning the child process.  This is the behaviour exhibited by the
    exec
    functions in Microsoft's C runtime library, and it is how D's now-deprecated
    Windows execv* functions work. Example:
auto commandLine = [ "program", "arg1", "arg2" ];
version (Posix)
{
    execv(commandLine[0], commandLine);
    throw new Exception("Failed to execute program");
}
else version (Windows)
{
    spawnProcess(commandLine);
    import coreAuthors
Lars Tandle Kyllingstad, Steven Schveighoffer, Vladimir Panteleev