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I want to make existing .NET applications (WinForms and WebForms) run on 64-bit machines, optimized to take advantage of more memory available on 64-bit machines. What do I need to do to the applications to take advantage of the memory? Do I just select the target CPU as 64-bit? What is the advantage of selecting the target versus just compiling the app for All CPUs and have the .NET optimize the app locally?

Will Crystal Reports (in VS 2008) run optimized for 64-bit and take advantage of the upper memory?

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    What does your application do that it needs more than 4 gigs of memory? One thing to consider, Visual Studio (fairly complex application) is a 32 bit app.
    – Roman
    Apr 7, 2010 at 4:03
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    You could separate the second question as another question entirely.
    – Jon Limjap
    Apr 7, 2010 at 4:03
  • @R0MANARMY actually .NET apps will start failing around 2GB of memory used. I've run into this limitation myself with a very complex call record processing application that needed to quickly burst through a huge backlog of events at startup. The benefit of increased virtual memory really helped there. It's certainly conceivable that a complex report could have a very large footprint.
    – Josh
    Apr 7, 2010 at 4:09
  • @Josh Einstein: I definitely didn't know .NET apps start to choke around 2GB (is that on 64 bit OS or 32 bit OS?). I was just curious if user54064 had a particular use case in mind that would benefit from this or a more nebulous "performance gain."
    – Roman
    Apr 7, 2010 at 4:21

3 Answers 3

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You can set the target CPU to "AnyCPU". This will JIT to x86 code on x86 machines and x64 code on x64 machines. Keep in mind that any unmanaged DLL's you reference will very likely cause problems. I have no idea if Crystal Reports takes any dependencies on unmanaged DLL's (it used to be a thin wrapper over ActiveX crap, not sure about now.)

If your application only references managed code that is compiled for AnyCPU you should be fine.

There is no real "advantage" to specifying the CPU architecture up front. It's a way to deal with the fact that you may need to ensure that the application only JIT's to one particular architecture. For example, if you use the Microsoft Jet OLEDB provider and your application is compiled for AnyCPU, on a x64 OS it will fail at runtime because it will run as a x64 process and there is no x64 OLEDB driver for Jet.

In this case, you could force it to target x86 then even on an x64 OS, the application would still JIT to x86.

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  • @KNoodles, no there is a x64 framework. If the entry assembly is compiled for x86 then the whole thing will run in WoW obviously. But the default is to JIT to x64. At least it was until VS 2010 which now defaults to x86 in order to hide the fact that Intellitrace doesn't work in x64. Bleh.
    – Josh
    Apr 7, 2010 at 4:12
  • I thought it only JITs to x86 when started from the debugger? Apr 7, 2010 at 5:30
  • @Simon, It may be x86 in the DEBUG configuration and AnyCPU in Release I'm not sure. However, it isn't dependent on whether or not it's started from the debugger. The build output of an EXE project by default in 2010 is x86.
    – Josh
    Apr 7, 2010 at 6:24
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Unless you need conditional compilation to be able to swap out third part components that require native support on different architectures, I would generally recommend leaving it up to the runtime (Any CPU).

The framework on the target machine will take care of it and it makes your life easier rather than having to manage build configuration for various environments.

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There are 2 flavors of CR runtime:

  • Crystal Reports (full version runtime)
  • Crystal Reports Basic (bundles with VS 2005, 2008)

Your 64-bit support will depend on which version you choose for your application.

There are no 64-bit dlls for Crystal Reports XI Release 2 or Crystal Reports 2008. Only the .NET 2005 (CR 10.2) and .NET 2008 (CR 10.5) bundles (CR Basic) are 64-bit. If you need to use the complete Crystal Reports runtime for CR XI or CR 2008 you have to compile your app in 32-bit mode (x86).

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