I have a project which needs to indirectly use three different versions of a third-party library. These versions are incompatible with each other, so I can't use a binding redirect - it has to be the exact .dll
file. (The libraries are Spire.Doc, Spire.XLS & Spire.PDF; the Spire.PDF DLL is referenced by all three)
I have separated the three components into individual wrapper projects, and created classes which wrap direct references to anything in the libraries. However, this doesn't solve my issue: the 'consuming' project still has to copy all of the libraries to the bin
folder in order to run. The build process doesn't know which version to copy, and so just copies the latest one. This gives me runtime exceptions due to the wrong DLL being present.
What I've considered/tried:
- Adding a binding redirect to a specific version (runtime exception because the exact version of the library is not found)
- Using a post-build step to merge the wrapper projects (again a runtime exception complaining about the absence of the library DLL)
- Creating separate console applications for each part of the application, then invoking them in a separate - this is a complicated last resort that I'd really rather not do!
I have read that extern alias might be able to help - but as far as I can tell, you can only distinguish between assemblies with different names. The Spire.PDF library has the same name in each project (and the same signed public token).
How can I use these three separate versions of the library independently in the same solution?
Edit:
This issue is slightly different to the suggested duplicate because I don't have the ability to change any code in the dependent libraries. Spire.Doc relies on a different version of Spire.PDF to Spire.XLS