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From the command line (or by any means really), how can I determine which CLR version a .NET assembly requires?

I need to determine if an assembly requires 2.0 or 4.0 CLR version.

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5 Answers

up vote 23 down vote accepted

ildasm.exe will show it if you double-click on "MANIFEST" and look for "Metadata version". By default, it's the version that the image was compiled against.

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Thanks a lot :-) – Klaus Byskov Pedersen Feb 22 '10 at 12:07
class Program {
  static void Main(string[] args) { 
      System.Console.WriteLine(
             System.Reflection.Assembly.LoadFrom(args[0]).ImageRuntimeVersion);
  }
}

Compile and run the above application under the latest .NET Framework (as an older CLR may be unable to load assemblies requiring a newer CLR) and run it passing the path to the assembly you want to check as the command line argument.

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+1 Thank you. That is useful for automations. – Klaus Byskov Pedersen Feb 22 '10 at 12:12

From command line

DUMPBIN your dll/exe /CLRHEADER

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interesting, thanks. – Klaus Byskov Pedersen Feb 22 '10 at 14:40
2  
I get a bunch of cryptic flags, including "2.05 runtime version", but this is a .NET 4.0 assembly. – romkyns Nov 30 '12 at 12:18

I'd suggest using ReflectionOnlyLoadFrom() insted of LoadFrom()

It has an advantage that it can load x64 and ia64 assemblies when running on x86 machine, while LoadFrom() will fail to do that.

Though it still won't load .Net 4.0 assemblies from a 2.0 powershell.

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Here's a PowerShell equivalent of the .NET code suggested in another answer. Using PowerShell means that you can skip a few steps like creating and compiling an assembly.

At a PowerShell prompt, run the following:

[System.Reflection.Assembly]::LoadFrom("C:\...\MyAssembly.dll").ImageRuntimeVersion

By default, PowerShell uses the .NET v2 runtime, so you'll get an exception for assemblies targetting v4. Stack Overflow question How can I run PowerShell with the .NET 4 runtime? details methods for changing that, if required.

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