Sign all assemblies in solution in VS2010 - visual-studio-2010

I have a solution with ~150 projects and now I want to sign them all with a strong key.
The problem is that I can't configure VS to build and sign at once. It gives me errors saying "Error XXX Assembly generation failed -- Referenced assembly '' does not have a strong name". But! When I use command prompt like "C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v4.0.30319\MSBuild.exe" <solution name>.sln /p:Configuration=Release /p:SignAssembly=true /p:AssemblyOriginatorKeyFile=%key_path% /p:OutDir=%outdir%Client" everything is ok, the solution is compiled and every assembly is signed.
Finally, how can I get the same behaviour when building via VS2010?

Related

Build specific Visual studio project under project solution using Msbuild and devenv

I have Visual studio project solution which has multiple .csproj. Each .csproj has some reference libraries.The project settings are made in such a way the reference libraries are built first and then .csproj is built. This works as expected when i run it in visual studio IDE. But when i try to execute using msbuild i'm getting an error saying target doesn't exist. Gone through many posts related to this issue ,tried possible things.But didn't built.Looks like i might be doing something silly or missing something in the settings.
Also tried using devenv from commandline. With this option i dont see any error but at same time the project doesnt build.I dont see any message after execution of command.Im using visual studio 2015
Here is my project structure
Poject.sln
ProjectA
porjectB
projectC
Libraries
libA
libB
msbuild "project.sln" target:"D:\Projects\Source\Demo\ProjectA\ProjectA.csproj" /t:build
"/p:Configuration=Debug" "/p:platform=x86"
I see the below error
"D:\project.sln" (D:\Projects\Source\Demo\ProjectA\;build target) (1) ->
D:\project.sln.metaproj : error MSB4057: The target "D:\Projects\Source\Demo\ProjectA" does not exist in the project. [D:\project.sln]
Here is the command used using devenv
devenv.exe "project.sln" /build Debug /project `"D:\Projects\source\Demo\Applications\ProjectA\ProjectA.csproj" /projectconfig Debug
After executing the above its doesnt build and i dont see any error too.
error MSB4057: The target "D:\Projects\Source\Demo\ProjectA" does not
exist in the project.
The error indicates your path in command is not valid and project.sln can't recognize the path. So you actually meet one path-related issue. And you should pass the ProjectA to the targets argument instead of ProjectA.csproj! More details see tip3 in For MSBuild.
For MSBuild:
1.If you're only trying to build ProjectA and its reference libraries.
Navigate(cd) to path where ProjectA.csproj exists, and then use command msbuild ProjectA.csproj /t:build /p:Configuration=Debug /p:platform=x86
Also you can directly use command msbuild AbsolutePath\ProjectA.csproj /t:build /p:Configuration=Debug /p:platform=x86. It's not necessary to use " to cover the path and arguments.
(ProjectA.csproj file should have definitions about the reference to those two library projects, so msbuild ProjectA.csproj will build those two projects first. You don't need to specify the xx.sln in your command.)
2.If you're trying to build whole solution(all the projects):
msbuild project.sln /t:build /p:Configuration=xxx /p:platform=xxx
Navigate to solution folder when you run above command, or use absolutepath\project.sln with that command.
3.When you want to build specific projects(more than one) in solution:
Check How to: Build Specific Targets in Solutions By Using MSBuild.exe. Since you're only build ProjectA, you don't need to use this format. For example: Only when you need to build both ProjectA and ProjectB, but not build ProjectC... You can use command like:
msbuild xxx.sln /t:NotInSlnfolder:Build;NewFolder\InSolutionFolder:Build
Pay attention to the path when you use this format. Whether your project is in solution folder can affect the build result a lot ! And, the direct cause of your issue, this command's targets argument needs one ProjectName as input instead of ProjectName.csproj.
For Devenv command:
1.I always use VS2017 and VS2019,so I'm not certainly sure if VS2015's devenv related command has big difference from VS2017's or VS2019's. But according to details from this VS2017 document:
Commands that begin with devenv are handled by the devenv.com utility, which delivers output through standard system streams, such as stdout and stderr.
Alternatively, commands that begin with devenv.exe can use the same switches, but the devenv.com utility is bypassed. Using devenv.exe directly prevents output from appearing on the console.
I think that's why you don't see any message after execution of command. You should use devenv.com command to see the output in console. And it's by design that devenv.exe will prevents output from appearing on the console.
2.The following command builds the project CSharpWinApp, using the Debug project build configuration within MySolution.
devenv "%USERPROFILE%\source\repos\MySolution.sln" /build Debug /project "CSharpWinApp\CSharpWinApp.csproj" /projectconfig Debug
More details about devenv reference please check this document.
In addition:
1.Looks like you have one strange project structure. I checked your error message above and it seems your several projects(xx.csproj) are not under Solution(xx.sln) folder. Just a suggestion, the normal folder structure for VS2015 is always:
Solution folder
xx.sln
ProjectA folder
ProjectA.csproj
ProjectB folder
ProjectB.csproj
2.For most of the projects, build using msbuild is more powerful and convenient than build using devenv. So if you don't have special reason, I recommend using Msbuild, the build engine of VS.
Hope all above helps to resolve your issue and puzzle. Let me know if your issue persists:)
File "/Users/morel893/Desktop/env/lib/python3.7/site-packages/django/db/backends/utils.py", line 84, in _execute
return self.cursor.execute(sql, params)
django.db.utils.ProgrammingError: relation "projects_project" does not exist
LINE 1: ...ct"."technology", "projects_project"."image" FROM "projects_...

MsBuild failing to build package, but okay with "just" building or building package after a "normal" build

I have a problem with building a Web Deployment Package from a Web Application Project (within a solution containing multiple projects, as well as multiple web applications).
This actually works
I can build the project just fine from the command line if I use this command for example:
msbuild D:\PathTo\Solution\Project\Project.csproj
/fl /flp:logfile="D:\buildadventures\Build.log";errorsonly;verbosity=diagnostic
/p:SolutionDir="D:\PathTo\Project\\";Configuration=Release;Platform=AnyCpu
But this does not work
But when I try the same command just a bit differently to build a deployment package for me like that:
msbuild D:\PathTo\Solution\Project\Project.csproj
/fl /flp:logfile="D:\buildadventures\Build.log";errorsonly;verbosity=diagnostic
/T:Package
/p:SolutionDir="D:\PathTo\Solution\\";Configuration=Release;Platform=AnyCpu;
PackageLocation="D:\buildadventures\Project.zip";
AutoParameterizationWebConfigConnectionStrings=false
...it fails miserably, spitting out hundreds of errors of the "The type or namespace name '' does not exist"-kind
And why does it work this way?
The strange thing however is, the second command I posted works fine if the first one was executed prior to that.
I suppose the tasks executed when doing a "normal" build are different to those that are executed when building a package, now I wonder in what way they are different.
What symptomatically seems to cause it
I noticed that in the project file of the project I want to build a package of contains a custom section towards the end:
<PropertyGroup>
<PreBuildEvent>
cscript $(ProjectDir)SvnRevision\svnrevision.vbs $(ProjectDir) $(ProjectDir)Version.cs
nuget install "$(ProjectDir)packages.config" -o "$(SolutionDir)Packages"
</PreBuildEvent>
</PropertyGroup>
This seems to be responsible for that difference; if I do a "normal" build I can see that after that a new "Packages" directory was created in my solution folder.
However, as you might have guessed, that directory is missing when I try to do the package creation command. I also do not run into this problem if I let Visual Studio create the package for me.
Maybe I do have to change the project file or passed properties to carry over this behavior for my package creation, too?
Or Is there maybe a way to force a "normal" build and then just append package creation to that somehow?
Silly me.
I was able to circumvent this issue by just calling multiple targets in my msbuild command such as that:
msbuild D:\PathTo\Solution\Project\Project.csproj
/fl /flp:logfile="D:\buildadventures\Build.log";errorsonly;verbosity=diagnostic
/t:Build;Package
/p:SolutionDir="D:\PathTo\Solution\\";Configuration=Release;Platform=AnyCpu;
PackageLocation="D:\buildadventures\Project.zip";
AutoParameterizationWebConfigConnectionStrings=false

MSBuild task to Build other solution projects fails in VS but works with MSBuild.exe command line

I have a custom MSBuild task which among other things adds embedded resources to other projects in the solution. After adding the resources I'd like to then build those projects, but found I can't get this working within Visual Studio.
To test, I stripped out the custom task entirely and redefined a simple AfterBuild target in the web project of a Silverlight solution. The target uses the MSBuild task to build the Silverlight application project in the solution, and looks like this:
<Target Name="AfterBuild">
<PropertyGroup>
<LinkedProject>..\SilverlightApplication1\SilverlightApplication1.csproj</LinkedProject>
</PropertyGroup>
<MSBuild Condition="'$(LinkedProject)' != '' "
Projects="$(LinkedProject)"
Targets="Build"
Properties="CustomFlag=true" >
</MSBuild>
</Target>
The odd thing is that this works perfectly when using MSBuild from the command line, yet does not work in Visual Studio when building the web project. I thought this might be some sort of Silverlight problem, and had the task build a .NET class library project instead, but the result was the same - it worked from the command line but not within VS. In VS there's no actual error - it's just that the Csc task does not compile the assembly and generates no output.
What do I need to do to get this working within Visual Studio?
Pass the 'UseHostCompilerIfAvailable=false' property to the MSBuild task.
It looks like Visual Studio breaks badly if csc is invoked from a MSBuild task as it reuses the initial project build settings for its in-process host compiler. In my case, I was building the same project twice - default build was using target framework v3.5, with a AfterBuild MSBuild task specifying v4.0. I ended up with the same issue - csc appeared to run but produced no output. I think what was happening was that with the UseHostCompilerIfAvailable property set to true, csc was calling the hosted compiler which reused my initial project settings, so even though the command line showed csc "building" my v4.0 assembly, the host compiler was simply overwriting the v3.5 one I had just built!
Change Visual Studio verbosity to detailed and check build log. I think that CoreBuild is not executed if your files have not changed, so you could try to use AfterCompile instead of AfterBuild.

QualityToolsPackage failed to load in build?

I am using Bamboo [from Altassian] and it uses the devenv.com builder to build solution files. Currently, I seem to be getting a "false" error in my builds - that I've tried to solve by myself but just can't - so I thought I would ask.
Each build succeeds normally - without errors stemming from code - but seems to instead give this error
Package 'Microsoft.VisualStudio.TestTools.TestCaseManagement.QualityToolsPackage, Microsoft.VisualStudio.QualityTools.TestCaseManagement, Version=10.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a' failed to load.
I've no idea why this is causing problems in the devenv.com environment and I can't figure out either how to "ignore" this error by some build command?
Try this ( from MSFT support )
Can you check if the dll is in the global assembly cache (open a VS 2010 command prompt
(Start | All Programs | Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0 | Visual Studio Tools))
Type in
Gacutil –l > list.txt
Notepad list.txt
Do you see an entry like
Microsoft.VisualStudio.QualityTools.TestCaseManagement, Version=10.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a, processorArchitecture=MSIL
If so, from the same command prompt, run fuslogvw, go to settings, select log bind failures to disk, select ok
Run your command line
C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0\Common7\IDE\devenv.com /Build "Release|Mixed Platforms" "D:\Builds\19\Test VizXView\VizXView v1.8 Test Release Build - Weekly\Sources\VizXView v1.8\VizXView 1.8.sln"
Click on the refresh button in fuslogvw. Do we get any bind errors?
I had a similar issue related to running unit tests on a build server that was using devenv.exe (not devenv.com). I had a premium VS installed on the build server but I'd written the unit tests with ultimate (which 'has' load testing, even tho I'd not used it). I used fusion viewer to work out that the missing dll was LoadTest.dll which I copied from my laptop to the buildserver, I also removed references in my solution that were in version control to: *.vsmdi and *.testsettings (they're deprecated) and I removed from the build def a reference to a .testsettings file.
My guess would be that even though I wasn't running a load unit test the build agent was trying to load the LoadTest libs just in case. Hope that helps
edit ---
ok, my own problem here was that I've got both vs2010 and vs2013 on my laptop. When I added the first test project to my VS2010 solution, the project added actually has a dependency on the 2013 version of the UnitTestFramework.dll. My build server only has vs2010 on it so I got the missing assembly error. Switching the reference to the 2010 version fixed this.

Anyone else notice that $(SolutionDir) resolves to ProjectDir when loading Wix projects into Vs2010?

I'm using Vs2010 and Wix 3.6.0917.0, for the record. I use the $(SolutionDir) property quite a bit in my .wixproj file, since I only ever build the installer as part of a solution build or as part of a team build, and never by itself. However, while building from the command line works just fine (both from cmd on the desktop and when building on build agents), when I attempt to reload the .wixproj file into the IDE, I get errors because all the $(SolutionDir) variables are resolving to the project directory, not the solution directory. Consider:
C:\workspace\projectCollection\teamProject\branch\solution.sln
C:\workspace\projectCollection\teamProject\branch\source\installer\installer.wixproj
and assume a shared custom targets file:
C:\workspace\projectCollection\teamProject\branch\build\shared.targets
which is referenced inside installer.wixproj with:
<Import Project="$(SolutionDir)build\shared.targets">
Command line builds work fine...
C:\workspace\projectCollection\teamProject\branch\> MSBuild /t:build /property:Platform=x64;Configuration=Debug solution.sln
0 Errors
0 Warnings
Build succeeded!
But load into vs2010 and you see...
The imported project
"C:\workspace\projectCollection\teamProject\branch\source\installer\build\shared.targets" was not found.
Confirm that the path in the <Import> declaration is correct, and that the file exists on disk.
C:\workspace\projectCollection\teamProject\branch\source\installer\installer.wixproj
You can see here that the resolved result of $(SolutionDir)build\shared.targets is getting the project directory and not the solution directory. What gives?
My guess would be that $(SolutionDir) resolves to nothing when the wixproj is being loaded into VS2010. In this case the imported file becomes "build\shared.targets". Since the path is relative it is assumed to be relative to the project directory. Using ".." or some other path could get you around the problem.
I verified this failed with WiX 3.5.2222.0 in VS2010. A C# console application project (csproj) worked as expected.
Have you filed a bug against WiX for this?
I looked at the WiX vs2010 addin code a little bit and the Solution properties are only created when doing a build and not when the project is loaded.

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