The goal is to have TFS build and deploy 2+ different configurations, and have the web.config transform files include the intended content in their output. This in an ASP.NET MVC project.

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Web.Debug.Config - see on PasteBin.
Web.Release.Config - see on PasteBin

The 2 transformed config files have their Build Action set to None. This was modified because all 3 web.*.config files were being included in the deployment.

TFS is configured correctly to build and deploy both configurations. It deploys to the 2 drop locations as expected. There are no MSBuild Arguments specified in the build definition.

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Problem: The 2 built and deployed web sites have the same web.config file. Basically it's as if the transformed files did not exist.

Expected: the changes specified (xdt:Transform="Replace" and xdt:Transform="Remove") would be present in the web.config files.

How can you configure your project or TFS to ensure the web.config transformations are processed and their outputs deployed to the correct deployment locations? What else can I check/modify?

  • Have confirmed that the transformations are good -- Vishal's Joshit's tutorial with the MSBuild on the command line output the correct transformations!
  • No modifications have been made to the .csproj for any post-build or deployment.
  • Are any xdt attributes being misused or missing?
  • There are no MSBuild Arguments specified in the build definition.
  • Are the web.config Build Actions set correctly?
  • We're not using web deployment packages or anything. Simply expecting to xcopy these outputs over to their various webserver locations at a later date.

If I'm missing any important information, please leave a comment, and I'll include any more relevant information!

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6 Answers

The answer to the question below seems to answer this one: MSBuild Script and VS2010 publish apply Web.config Transform

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thanks for this. I hadn't seen it. I'm hoping there's a TFS specific solution out there. I'm not sure where I could modify for the solution in that answer. Certainly not friendly to the admin when needing to repeat this process for 10+ build definitions. Thanks again! – p.campbell Jan 20 '11 at 20:09
@p.campbell I had actually given up on the config transformations, partly because many of our projects are WinForm based, and modified the build workflow to call a code activity that merged in the configuration specific changes. – Sean Lynch Jan 20 '11 at 20:44
@p.campbell have you seen this proposal? area51.stackexchange.com/proposals/15894/… – Sean Lynch Jan 20 '11 at 21:08
thanks, I'll be joining that SE proposal! – p.campbell Jan 24 '11 at 16:54
feedback

Here's what I've been using. The current TransformXml task has a bug where it leaves files open. Read more here.

You can call this task and deploy for each configuration you're working with.

<Target Name="TransformWebConfig">

    <PropertyGroup>
        <_tempSourceFile>$([System.IO.Path]::GetTempFileName())</_tempSourceFile>
        <_tempTransformFile>$([System.IO.Path]::GetTempFileName())</_tempTransformFile>
    </PropertyGroup>

    <Copy SourceFiles="$(_websiteDirectory)\Web.config" DestinationFiles="$(_tempSourceFile)"/>
    <Copy SourceFiles="$(_websiteDirectory)\Web.$(_transformConfiguration).config" DestinationFiles="$(_tempTransformFile)"/>

    <MSBuild.Community.Tasks.Attrib Files="$(_websiteDirectory)\Web.config" ReadOnly="false" />

    <TransformXml Source="$(_tempSourceFile)"
                  Transform="$(_tempTransformFile)"
                  Destination="$(_websiteDirectory)\Web.config"
                  StackTrace="false" />
</Target>
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thanks for this. I'm a bit confused at this stage; where goes this snippet of XML get placed? Any other modifications of the TFS Build definition to accommodate? – p.campbell Jan 24 '11 at 15:52
How familiar are you with MSBuild? You would place this target in your build definition and perhaps call it from the "BeforeDropBuild" target. – MasterSplinter Jan 28 '11 at 18:48
-1: why should he have to use this? He's using TFS 2010. – John Saunders Sep 4 '11 at 22:03
True. Though I think when I posted my answer, that wasn't the case. Who knows, I'll re-post the correct answer for TFS 2010. – MasterSplinter Sep 6 '11 at 19:41
feedback

TFS Team Build 2010 does not automatically transform your Web.configs. You need to add a custom workflow activity to your build process template to accomplish this.

Edwald Hofman has a good blog that explains how to modify TFS 2010 Build Process Templates, so I won't go in depth on that here.

http://www.ewaldhofman.nl/post/2010/04/29/Customize-Team-Build-2010-e28093-Part-4-Create-your-own-activity.aspx

After you figure out how to add custom activities to your build process template, add the following activity into your workflow. It utilizes the Microsoft.Web.Publishing.Tasks assembly (located: C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v10.0\Web) to perform the transformations:

/// <summary>
/// Transforms configuration files using TransformXml
/// </summary>
[BuildActivity(HostEnvironmentOption.All)]
public sealed class WebConfigTransform : CodeActivity
{
    #region Public Properties

    /// <summary>
    /// The binaries folder
    /// </summary>
    [RequiredArgument]
    public InArgument<string> BinariesLocation { get; set; }

    #endregion

    #region Overrides of CodeActivity

    /// <summary>
    /// When implemented in a derived class, performs the execution of the activity.
    /// </summary>
    /// <param name="context">The execution context under which the activity executes.</param>
    protected override void Execute(CodeActivityContext context)
    {
        var binariesFolder = context.GetValue(BinariesLocation);

        foreach (var sourceFolder in Directory.GetDirectories(Path.Combine(binariesFolder, "_PublishedWebsites")))
        {
            var sourceFile = Path.Combine(sourceFolder, "Web.config");
            if (File.Exists(sourceFile))
            {
                var filesToTransform = Directory.GetFiles(sourceFolder, "Web.*.config");

                if (!filesToTransform.Any())
                {
                    context.WriteBuildMessage("No web.config found to transform");
                }

                foreach (var fileToTransform in filesToTransform)
                {
                    context.WriteBuildMessage(string.Format("Transforming {0}", Path.GetFileName(fileToTransform)));

                    var tempSourceFile = Path.GetTempFileName();
                    var tempTransformFile = Path.GetTempFileName();

                    File.Copy(sourceFile, tempSourceFile, true);
                    File.Copy(fileToTransform, tempTransformFile, true);

                    var transformation = new TransformXml
                                             {
                                                 BuildEngine = new BuildEngineStub(),
                                                 Source = tempSourceFile,
                                                 Transform = tempTransformFile,
                                                 Destination = fileToTransform
                                             };

                    transformation.Execute();
                }
            }
        }
    }

    #endregion
}

NOTE: You'll need to create a BuildEngineStub class that implements the IBuildEngine interface in order to use the MSBuild task.

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The other options are a far far better way to go and significantly easier to setup – Allen Nov 3 '11 at 19:44
Disagree. I'd much rather make this change to my build process template once (for ALL solutions to use) than have to edit every single .proj file or build definition I create. – MasterSplinter Nov 4 '11 at 13:58
Hrm, good point, never thought about that... Admittedly, I'm new to building through TFS and the build templates but this all seems very frustrating. It seems that we're having to go out of our way to dev/maintain scripts to implement functionality that is already present in msbuild. – Allen Nov 4 '11 at 16:02
I was too frustrated when we first switched from TFS 2008 to 2010. But once you get a grasp for modifying the build process template, I think you'll appreciate the enhancement. – MasterSplinter Nov 15 '11 at 21:18
I'm having a go at implementing this, but I'm not getting a WriteBuildMessage method on context, is this an extension method from somewhere I'm missing? – Chris Surfleet Feb 3 at 9:54
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feedback

Way late but the Drop does not actually do any transforming.
What you need is to add '/p:DeployOnBuild=True' (without '') to the MSBuild Arguments.
This will create a Package that can then be used to install the website either via command line or using the IIS Import Application wizard.
If what you are after is to directly publish more than one configuration that is a whole other story and that is how I stumbled onto this post.

Good luck.

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Try not to set the Build Platform - basicly delete "Any CPU" in ItemToBuild and select MSBuild platform as "Auto"

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