88

I have a VS2008 I want to copy certain files from a directory into my /bin/ folder. I have set the files (located in /common/browserhawk/) to "Copy to Output Directory". However, it copies the folder structure as well: the files are copied to /bin/common/browserhawk/

How do I get these files to copy to just /bin/? I do not want to store these in the root of the website to get them to copy correctly.

Related Question: Visual Studio adds .dll and .pdb to project after compiling

8 Answers 8

61

You can add a Post Build Event to copy the files.
Go to project properties, Build Events tab and add the following to the Post-build event command line:

copy "$(ProjectDir)\common\browserhawk\*.*" "$(TargetDir)"

Be sure to include the quotes if your project path has spaces in it.

2
  • Thanks for that advice, as it has just worked for me in VS2012 as well.
    – Dib
    Sep 30, 2014 at 5:40
  • 2
    I've modified this slightly in my case: xcopy /s /d /y "$(ProjectDir)\stuff" "$(TargetDir)\stuff" Oct 22, 2015 at 20:29
47

Since I cannot comment on previous answers, I will put the solution here:

Adding to what @PaulAlexander provided, add the following to your .csproj/.vbproj file:

<ItemGroup>
    <AvailableItemName Include="RootContent">
      <Visible>false</Visible>
    </AvailableItemName>  
</ItemGroup>
<Target Name="AfterBuild">
    <Copy
        DestinationFolder="$(OutputPath)"
        SourceFiles="@(RootContent)"
        SkipUnchangedFiles="true"
        />  
</Target>

This allows you to select "RootContent" as the Build Action in the Properties window, and all can be accessed via the GUI. A more complete explanation: the "AvailableItemName" option basically creates a new named-list that you can assign items in the project to under the "Build Action" property in the Properties window. You can then use this newly created list in any Target you like (eg via "@(RootContent)").

9
  • Nice answer, just used this myself to success! Jan 21, 2011 at 17:57
  • Also note that VS 2010 (not sure about older versions) will complain about AvailableItemName being an invalid element if you edit the project file within VS; just ignore the warning, it works anyway.
    – Aaronaught
    Oct 8, 2011 at 12:39
  • 2
    Unfortunately this only copies the file into the output directory of the project the file belongs to - and not in the output directory of the startup project. This is important when using this in a library project. Sep 5, 2012 at 13:08
  • 2
    This works great for building in release and debug mode with vs2008 but it does not seem to work when using one click publishing. Any suggestions?
    – Soenhay
    Apr 17, 2013 at 17:38
  • 3
    Not worked for me in vs2015. Fixed by rewriting target a bit: <Target Name="RootOutputCopyTarget" AfterTargets="Build"> ... </Target>
    – lorond
    Apr 28, 2016 at 14:04
45

If you edit the .csproj / .vbproj in a text editor, you can control where the file is placed in the output directory, and also what name the file will have in the output directory. For example:

<None Include="content\someContent.txt">
  <Link>someContentInOutputDirectory.txt</Link>
  <CopyToOutputDirectory>PreserveNewest</CopyToOutputDirectory>
</None>

This will put the file content\someContent.txt into bin\someContentInOutputDirectory.txt. You can also choose a subdirectory in bin if you want; simply add it to the Link element.

14
  • 3
    Wow, was I lucky to need this now and not two days ago. Thanks; this is great!
    – amelia
    Feb 6, 2014 at 5:49
  • 2
    Oh my god, thank you. I just spent 6 hours trying to fix some corner-case garbage where VS wasn't copying .dll's in an intelligent way. This is the real answer to life, the universe and everything.
    – Brandon
    May 8, 2014 at 15:50
  • 5
    This is by far the best solution
    – PhilHdt
    Jun 20, 2014 at 20:11
  • 1
    I found once I had done this and reloaded the project in visual studio the dependency files disappeared from the solution explorer as if not included in the project. However it still builds as expected, and does copy to output as desired. As a work-around I'm currently adding each file twice; once with no action, and once with 'copy to output' set.
    – Élie
    Dec 2, 2015 at 2:51
  • 1
    This is not the intended usage of this tag. In VS2013, this throws a warning when loading the project, and the file is not visible as added to the project because it is the project directory.
    – jpmc26
    Jul 15, 2016 at 20:58
15

I believe the XCOPY command handles directories and files better. Therefore,

    XCOPY "$(ProjectDir)common/browserhawk" "$(TargetDir)" /E /I /F /Y

Which allows for creating folders off the target directory.

    XCOPY "$(ProjectDir)Templates" "$(TargetDir)" /E /I /F /Y

The Project folder/file structure of:

    A:\TEMP\CONSOLEAPPLICATION3\TEMPLATES
    ├───NewFolder1
    ├───NewFolder2
    │       TextFile1.txt
    │       TextFile2.txt
    └───NewFolder3
            TextFile1.txt
            TextFile2.txt
            TextFile3.txt

Becomes:

    A:\TEMP\CONSOLEAPPLICATION3\BIN\DEBUG
    │   ConsoleApplication3.exe
    │   ConsoleApplication3.pdb
    │   ConsoleApplication3.vshost.exe
    │   ConsoleApplication3.vshost.exe.manifest
    ├───NewFolder1
    ├───NewFolder2
    │       TextFile1.txt
    │       TextFile2.txt
    │
    └───NewFolder3
            TextFile1.txt
            TextFile2.txt
            TextFile3.txt
1
  • /D may be useful too, to avoid overwriting possible changes. Sep 23, 2015 at 14:50
10

Add the following to your .csproj/.vbproj file

<Target Name="AfterBuild">
    <Copy
        DestinationFolder="$(OutputPath)"
        SourceFiles="@(RootContent)"
        SkipUnchangedFiles="true"
        />  
</Target>

Then change the Build Action of any files you want in the root folder to RootContent.

8
  • Not through the dialogs...but you can edit your project in VS. Right-click the project and select Unload Project. Then right click and select Edit. Then you can edit the MSBuild file that is your project. Feb 21, 2010 at 18:15
  • 2
    Thanks, this looks useful. Unfortuntely, even after adding your snippet to the .vbproj file, RootContent does not show up in the "Build Action" dropdown list and entering it manually results in a "Property value is not valid" error from Visual Studio. What did I miss?
    – Heinzi
    May 19, 2010 at 14:07
  • Not working with Visual Studio 2010 C# Console Application project.
    – AMissico
    Jul 29, 2010 at 15:58
  • Not working with Visual Studio 2010 VB.NET Console Application project.
    – AMissico
    Jul 29, 2010 at 16:00
  • Not working with Visual Studio 2008 C# Console Application project.
    – AMissico
    Jul 29, 2010 at 16:03
5

I have used this in VS2010, VS2015, VS2017, VS2019, and VS2022. I prefer this solution because:

  1. The XML is reusable in any project
  2. The "RootContent" is chosen as a Build Action in the Visual Studio UI, just like any other "Content"
  3. The "CopyToOutputDirectory" is obeyed, just as you would expect
  4. The RootContent is added to the project's output: gets carried through Project-References, obeys "Clean", etc.
  5. The RootContent can be specified with a wildcard, preserving the recursive folder structure:
<RootContent Include="common\browserhawk\**">
  <CopyToOutputDirectory>Always</CopyToOutputDirectory>
</RootContent>

Toward the beginning of project file:

  <ItemGroup>
    <AvailableItemName Include="RootContent">
      <!-- Add "RootContent" as a choice in the "Build Action" dropdown. -->
      <Visible>True</Visible>
    </AvailableItemName>
  </ItemGroup>

Borrowed From This Answer

After the Microsoft .targets Import:

  <PropertyGroup>
    <AssignTargetPathsDependsOn>
      $(AssignTargetPathsDependsOn);
      IncludeRootContentAsContent;
    </AssignTargetPathsDependsOn>
  </PropertyGroup>
  <Target Name="IncludeRootContentAsContent">
    <CreateItem Include="@(RootContent)" AdditionalMetadata="TargetPath=%(RecursiveDir)%(Filename)%(Extension)">
      <Output ItemName="ContentWithTargetPath" TaskParameter="Include" />
    </CreateItem>
  </Target>

Borrowed From This Answer

5
  • This is good - I would swap out RootContent which implies "hard coded" to CustomContent to indicate this is specialized content we're adding to this project and we need copied in this particular way. Also as an aside, I needed TargetPath=%(RecursiveDir)%(Filename)%(Extension) to recreate the folder structure from the specified CustomContent files to the output path.
    – Jonno
    May 5, 2015 at 0:11
  • @Jonno The goal is to copy the file(s) directly to the root output directory, regardless of RecursiveDirectory. The built-in "Content" Build Action already provides us a mechanism to copy while maintaining the RecursiveDirectory.
    – MattGerg
    Jan 20, 2016 at 17:06
  • I haven't had a chance to test this in a while, but wouldn't setting "Content" build action cause files under /common/browserhawk/ to be copied to /bin/common/browserhawk/ as the OP said? IIRC, my intention was to have /common/browserhawk/a.txt end up in /bin/a.txt but allow recursion from there down, so /common/browserhawk/secret/stuff.png ends up in /bin/secret/stuff.png.
    – Jonno
    Feb 4, 2016 at 6:09
  • @Jonno Ok, yeah, that makes total sense now. I updated the answer to include the %(RecursiveDirectory). This is really cool, because in addition to selecting individual files in the IDE, you can also specify multiple files with wildcards. When using the ** wildcard, the entire folder structure will be preserved.
    – MattGerg
    Feb 4, 2016 at 17:23
  • 1
    Thanks a lot for such great answer! I think this answer is the right answer because of the following: 1. No external cmds 2. cross platform May 24, 2017 at 2:49
2

I ended up adding a step to the nant build file to copy after successful compliation

<target name="action.copy.browserhawk.config" depends="compile.source">
    <copy todir="${App.Web.dir}/bin/" includeemptydirs="false">
        <fileset basedir="${browserhawk.config.dir}">
            <include name="bhawk_bb.dat" />
            <include name="bhawk_sp.dat" />
            <include name="browserhawk.properties" />
            <include name="maindefs.bdd" />
            <include name="maindefs.bdf" />
            <include name="BH_PRO.lic" />
        </fileset>
    </copy>
    <echo message="COPY BROWSERHAWK CONFIG: SUCCESS   ${datetime::now()}" />
</target>
1
  • 2
    +1 because for someone using nant this is still a helpful answer Nov 2, 2012 at 10:03
1

You could build a batch file to copy the files and execute it as a post-build event.

1
  • I ended up doing this for one of my projects (although I used a Python script rather than a bat). Apr 6, 2010 at 22:37

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