62

I'm building/packing a web application in a build server, and it fails with the following message:

ASPNETCOMPILER error ASPCONFIG: The CodeDom provider type "Microsoft.VisualC.CppCodeProvider, CppCodeProvider, Version=10.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a" could not be located.

This is the build server environment:

  • Windows Server 2008 R2 Standard
  • TeamCity 8.0.4
  • .NET 4.5
  • Windows SDK for Windows 7 and .NET 4
  • Windows SDK for Windows 8 and .NET 4.5
  • Portable Class Library Tools
  • ASP MVC 4

It is a ASP MVC 4 web application, targeting .NET 4.5.

The build configuration consists in building the solution with MSBuild, and deploying it to a package, so I can publish it later.

Through the log of TeamCity, I can see the error arising when MSBuild runs aspnet_compiler.exe.

The builds with no problem in my DEV machine and can also publish it to a local IIS without problems.

Does anyone know what may be causing this issue?

UPDATE

See my answer below.

18 Answers 18

87

For me this error was popping up in VS2017 when building the web project. The fix was to make the node_modules directory hidden in File Explorer. Apparently this stops the ASP.NET compiler from scanning all these files and thus prevents the error.

3
  • This is definitely a workaround (one I couldn't use because having the node_module folder hidden broke other workflows.) I found installing .NET 3.5 made this problem go away.
    – ctrl-j
    Nov 9, 2017 at 14:50
  • Had a similar issue, cause was the npm package "uws" and its *.c files. I just moved it out of the folder before the build and put it back after. Not really feasible to hide the whole folder for our purposes either, unfortunately.
    – Mark Clark
    Sep 26, 2019 at 5:18
  • Worked for me. This work around really shows the age of Visual Studio. Feb 8, 2021 at 20:44
35

This post gave me an important clue: apparently ASP.NET precompilation scans the project and output files and tries to compile every source file it finds in its way, despite its language (see here).

In the case, my web app depends on a project which includes some unmanaged dll along a ".h" file. These files are copied to the output directory ("Copy if newer") so I can pinvoke it at runtime.

It seems ASP.NET precompilation finds the ".h" and tries to compile it, even though there is no need of it. And, as I see it, it fails because my build server does not has the tools for the job (it looks like CppCodeProvider comes with the .NET 2.0 SDK).

When I changed the project not to copy those files to the output directory, the build ran fine. I also tested copying the files, but with "PrecompileBeforePublish" set to false in the publish profile, and it also worked.

Now I have some options, but I don't like any of them:

  • Disable "PrecompileBeforePublish". I believe the main disadvantage of that is the app users experience will be slower on the first site access.

  • Try to exclude files from the output folder and add them again after pre-compilation. That seems a lot of work for something I shouldn't be worrying in first place.

  • Try to tell "aspnet_compiler.exe" to exclude the offending files/folder when executing. I don't know how to do it using the publish profile, because I only have control over "PrecompileBeforePublish". Also, it seems "aspnet_compiler.exe" does not offer that option (here and here).

I think for now I'll disable "PrecompileBeforePublish", because it seems a fast path with few caveats. But I believe there should be a better way to handle it, excluding folders or file types from precompilation using the publish profile.

6
  • My goodness! - Thank you so much for this post - you probably saved me days of frustration since this is exactly what happened to us. Did you ever find a way to ignore a folder? (Though my first choice is to delete the offending files from the repo.)
    – Edward
    Jan 16, 2015 at 0:22
  • No, Edward, I had to keep "PrecompileBeforePublish" disabled. However, I stopped working on that project soon after this problem, so maybe the answer is still somewhere out there =] Jan 18, 2015 at 22:08
  • 4
    @Edward I just ran into this too. I've had good luck so far with marking my no compile necessary folders with the hidden attribute (attrib +H c:\path\to\problem\directory) in my build script before running aspnet_compiler.exe then resetting the hidden attribute when its done.
    – twamley
    Feb 1, 2015 at 17:59
  • That's another good option @twamley. I was able to delete the files, so it is working for me again. Your method sounds like a valid answer to the question, though. ping me if you write it up and I'll vote it up.
    – Edward
    Feb 2, 2015 at 16:50
  • 7
    This info is golden! We have a node_modules folder in our front-end and this causes problems as some modules include c-files and header files that are not meant for Visual Studio. The only way to avoid this error was to have msbuild delete the folder.
    – oligofren
    May 2, 2016 at 17:57
33

For the benefit of those who find this later on google...

Root Cause

As the error implies, the assembly "Microsoft.VisualC.CppCodeProvider" couldn't be found.

This was added to the Global Assembly Cache (GAC) as part of Visual Studio 2015 installation, but not Visual Studio 2017.

The Fix

The proper fix is to add the missing reference to the GAC.

Run the "Developer Command Prompt" as admin, and run the following

gacutil /i "path to CppCodeProvider.dll" or gacutil /i "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2 017\Professional\Common7\IDE\PublicAssemblies\CppCodeProvider.dll"

e.g.


C:\Windows\System32>gacutil /i "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2
017\Professional\Common7\IDE\PublicAssemblies\CppCodeProvider.dll"
Microsoft (R) .NET Global Assembly Cache Utility.  Version 4.0.30319.0
Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation.  All rights reserved.

Assembly successfully added to the cache

C:\Windows\System32>

On next build the following error is no longer thrown.

ASPNETCOMPILER error ASPCONFIG: The CodeDom provider type "Microsoft.VisualC.CppCodeProvider, CppCodeProvider, Version=10.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a" could not be located.

5
  • This one should be marked as an answer. Thanks Daniel Jan 30, 2020 at 8:25
  • 2
    What do you do if you don't have the CppCodeProvider.dll at all? This seems like the answer that would solve my problem, however after searching my entire C: drive I discovered I don't have the .dll anywhere.
    – Ryan
    Mar 4, 2020 at 20:38
  • 1
    Try modifying your visual studio installation and choosing "Desktop Development with C++". Mar 6, 2020 at 23:10
  • Resolved for me, thanks! Your path may be different depending on the version of VS you're using Mar 26, 2020 at 17:48
  • Solved my problem. This should be The Answer. Nov 26, 2020 at 15:45
10

This started happening when I updating to VS2017. The problem for me was node.js, if I deleted the node_modules folder then the project would build without errors. It turns out that changing the value of MvcBuildViews to false in the csproj file as suggested by anders here fixes it. This isn't ideal though since mvc views won't be compiled until IIS renders them. Personally, I just hide the node_modules folder to get around the issue but I wanted to add this answer in case it helps shed some light on the underlying issue for someone else.

<MvcBuildViews>false</MvcBuildViews>

1
6

In my case I had added an angular website to my solution which caused this error.

Resolved the error with following steps.

On the menu bar, choose Build > Configuration Manager.

In the Project contexts table, exclude the angular website (which contained node_modules)

In the Build column for the project, clear the check box.

Choose the Close button, and then rebuild the solution.

2
  • me too it was because I added my App folder from my React App just because I wanted to see everything in visual studio despite using VS Code for the App and visual studio for the Api
    – Andy
    Jan 17, 2020 at 23:51
  • This is actually the better answer here. Make sure any projects that are not built by VS are unchecked in the configuration manager. Mar 19, 2020 at 20:18
4

In my scenario, I have to ship a Perl interpreter with my ASP.Net website (don't ask why I need Perl, and I'm sorry I do in advance!), and that included .c files that caused the aspnet_compiler.exe to error out, as others have mentioned being their problem. The perl directory is in my bin folder, and is required at runtime.

The trouble I found was when you attrib +H the folder, it indeed was skipped by aspnet_compiler, but then wouldn't be in my publish output folder. So I had to hack it even more by hiding the folder, compile views, unhide folder, and then copy folder to the right location. This involved modifying the original AspNetPreCompile task. See below:

<!-- Overwrite AspNetPreCompile task because it was trying to compile .c files found in the Perl directory. This prevents that but still copies Perl to publish file. -->
<!-- Taken from: C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2017\Professional\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v15.0\Web\Transform -->
<Target Name="AspNetPreCompile" DependsOnTargets="$(AspNetPreCompileDependsOn)"  Condition="'$(AspNetPreCompile)' != 'false'">

    <PropertyGroup  Condition="'$(UseMetabasePath)' == 'true'" >
        <_PreAspnetCompileMergeSingleTargetFolderFullPath></_PreAspnetCompileMergeSingleTargetFolderFullPath>
        <_AspNetCompilerVirtualPath></_AspNetCompilerVirtualPath>
    </PropertyGroup>
    <PropertyGroup  Condition="'$(UseMetabasePath)' != 'true'" >
        <_PreAspnetCompileMergeSingleTargetFolderFullPath>$([System.IO.Path]::GetFullPath($(_PreAspnetCompileMergeSingleTargetFolder)))</_PreAspnetCompileMergeSingleTargetFolderFullPath>
    </PropertyGroup>

    <PropertyGroup>
        <_PostAspnetCompileMergeSingleTargetFolderFullPath>$([System.IO.Path]::GetFullPath($(_PostAspnetCompileMergeSingleTargetFolder)))</_PostAspnetCompileMergeSingleTargetFolderFullPath>
    </PropertyGroup>

    <!-- Modification #1. -->
    <Exec Command="attrib +H &quot;$(IntermediateOutputPath)AspnetCompileMerge\Source\bin\perl&quot;" />

    <AspNetCompiler
        PhysicalPath="$(_PreAspnetCompileMergeSingleTargetFolderFullPath)"
        TargetPath="$(_PostAspnetCompileMergeSingleTargetFolderFullPath)"
        VirtualPath="$(_AspNetCompilerVirtualPath)"
        Force="$(_AspNetCompilerForce)"
        Debug="$(DebugSymbols)"
        Updateable="$(EnableUpdateable)"
        KeyFile="$(_AspNetCompileMergeKeyFile)"
        KeyContainer="$(_AspNetCompileMergeKeyContainer)"
        DelaySign="$(DelaySign)"
        AllowPartiallyTrustedCallers="$(AllowPartiallyTrustedCallers)"
        FixedNames="$(_AspNetCompilerFixedNames)"
        Clean="$(Clean)"
        MetabasePath="$(_AspNetCompilerMetabasePath)"
        ToolPath="$(AspnetCompilerPath)"
        />

    <!-- Modification #2. -->
    <Exec Command="attrib -H &quot;$(IntermediateOutputPath)AspnetCompileMerge\Source\bin\perl&quot;" />

    <!--
        Removing APP_DATA is done here so that the output groups reflect the fact that App_data is
        not present
        -->
    <RemoveDir Condition="'$(DeleteAppDataFolder)' == 'true' And Exists('$(_PostAspnetCompileMergeSingleTargetFolderFullPath)\App_Data')"
                Directories="$(_PostAspnetCompileMergeSingleTargetFolderFullPath)\App_Data" />


    <CollectFilesinFolder Condition="'$(UseMerge)' != 'true'"
        RootPath="$(_PostAspnetCompileMergeSingleTargetFolderFullPath)" >
        <Output TaskParameter="Result" ItemName="_AspnetCompileMergePrecompiledOutputNoMetadata" />
    </CollectFilesinFolder>

    <ItemGroup Condition="'$(UseMerge)' != 'true'">
        <FileWrites Include="$(_PostAspnetCompileMergeSingleTargetFolderFullPath)\**"/>
    </ItemGroup>

    <!-- Modification #3. -->
    <ItemGroup>
        <Perl Include="$(IntermediateOutputPath)AspnetCompileMerge\Source\bin\perl\**\*.*" />
    </ItemGroup>

    <!-- Modification #4. -->
    <Copy SourceFiles="@(Perl)" DestinationFolder="$(_PostAspnetCompileMergeSingleTargetFolderFullPath)\bin\perl\%(RecursiveDir)"></Copy>

</Target>

DO NOT modify the original .targets file, copy this into your .csproj file as a child to the <project> node.

Key takeaways:

Use Exec command to attrib +H Directory before running aspnet_compiler.exe via the AspNetCompiler task, and attrib -H Directory afterwards.

Create an ItemGroup to suck in all the files that still need to be copied.

Run the Copy task, utilizing that ItemGroup to put the files where they need to be in order for the rest of the publish task to include them. We get to use all of the variables that Microsoft made when authoring this Task, so we can use those here too.

Pro to modifying the original task: very little changes about the normal behavior, so it should still just work.

Possible con to modifying the original task: Microsoft might change this task in the future, making our copy out of date.

If you don't have my weird requirements, the simpler solution to hiding a folder is as follows:

<Target Name="Test" BeforeTargets="AspNetPreCompile">
    <Exec Command="attrib +H Directory" />
</Target>
<Target Name="Test" AfterTargets="AspNetPreCompile">
    <Exec Command="attrib -H Directory" />
</Target>

Answer inspired by the comment twamley made in Arthur Nunes answer.

3

In my case it was the node_modules folder. I made this change in my csproj file for my .net 4.8 app to fix it.

This will just add the hidden attribute to the node_modules folder and then unhide it after the Razor pages are compiled.

<Target Name="MvcBuildViews" AfterTargets="AfterBuild" Condition="'$(MvcBuildViews)'=='true'">
  <Exec Command="attrib +H &quot;$(ProjectDir)node_modules&quot;" />
  <AspNetCompiler VirtualPath="temp" PhysicalPath="$(WebProjectOutputDir)" />
  <Exec Command="attrib -H &quot;$(ProjectDir)node_modules&quot;" />
</Target>
0

Try doing the folowing.

Setting RequireTargetFramework to 4.0.

Link:ASPNETCOMPILER error ASPCONFIG: Could not load file or assembly 'Microsoft.VisualBasic.Activities.Compiler' or one of its dependencies

0

In my case the issue was that the web config of a parent solution (root level project) in IIS had this in it's web config (by mistake, not sure how it got there). Took a long time to track down, because nothing I could do in my solution/project could affect it in any way.

So might be worth checking the web.config of all that might be involved.

0

For me this error was showing when my website's physical path was invalid in IIS. To resolve that right click on website (Manage website -> Advanced settings -> Physical Path).

0

In my case, on a new machine, installed VS2017 and opened an asp.net core 1.1 web application from source control. The error showed up. I installed node.js and the project compiled.

0

My solution to this error was a combination of two pre-existing answers on this page. I had a .h file in my web project directory that had not caused a problem until I tried to build the project on a VS 2017 machine.

In my case I simply zipped it up, but the upshot seems to be that you can no longer keep unrelated code files in the web directory or VS will trip up trying to compile them.

0

I solved it with deleting node modules folder then running npm i from git bash and not from VS2019 built in terminal.

0

Copy cppprovider.dll from Visual Studio 2015 installation path to:

C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 11.0\Common7\IDE\PublicAssemblies

0

An easy way to solve is that to reference the CppCodeProvider.dll. It may locate at

C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio{version}\{edition}\Common7\IDE\PublicAssemblies

For example:

C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2019\Enterprise\Common7\IDE\PublicAssemblies\CppCodeProvider.dll

It will be in the bin folder.

enter image description here

0

I moved my solution from VS2019 to VS2022 and was having this error when I tried to publish solution. This is how I made the error disappear.

  • Right-click on References>> Add References
  • Then Search for Microsoft.VisualC
  • tick Microsoft.VisualC and Microsoft.VisualC.VSCodeProvider
  • click ok. Error gone!
0

I installed VS2019 on a new laptop but kept getting the same error message as the OP. (it still worked fine on my desktop PC).

After a day or so of trying every answer on here and Google, and getting no joy, I tried using, from the toolbar, Build -> Publish Web App, which built my website into the Publish folder ok.

I then took this 'Publish' folder and copied it to a new place on my C:drive.

Then after closings and re-opening VS2019, started with "continue without code".

Then File -> Open -> Web Site... select my 'Publish' folder, and hooray I can now build and debug my project locally.

0

The issue was occurring for me when I was building a web project with node_modules. I fixed the error by enabling Desktop development with C++ option in my Visual Studio installer.

Source: https://developercommunity.visualstudio.com/t/cppcodeprovider-not-properly-installed-with-vs2017/240322#T-N333161

In Visual Studio 2017 CppCodeProvider.dll is getting shipped with “Desktop development with C++” as a result installing “Desktop development with C++” should resolve the issue.

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