vote up 2 vote down star
1

I have a question I don't know if it can be solved. I have one C# project on Visual Studio 2005 and I want to create different DLL names depending on a preprocessor constant. What I have in this moment is the preprocessor constant, two snk files and two assembly's guid. I also create two configurations (Debug and Debug Preprocessor) and they compile perfectly using the snk and guid appropiate.

#if PREPROCESSOR_CONSTANT
[assembly: AssemblyTitle("MyLibraryConstant")]
[assembly: AssemblyProduct("MyLibraryConstant")]
#else
[assembly: AssemblyTitle("MyLibrary")]
[assembly: AssemblyProduct("MyLibrary")]
#endif

Now, I have to put the two assemblies into the GAC. The first assembly is added without problems but the second isn't.

What can I do to create two or more different assemblies from one Visual Studio project?

It's possible that I forgot to include a new line on "AssemblyInfo.cs" to change the DLL name depending on the preprocessor constant?

flag

56% accept rate

5 Answers

vote up 4 vote down check

Here is a sample Post-Build event:

if "$(ConfigurationName)" == "Debug" goto Debug
if "$(ConfigurationName)" == "Release" goto Release

goto End

:Debug
del "$(TargetDir)DebugOutput.dll"
rename "$(TargetPath)" "DebugOutput.dll"

:Release
del "$(TargetDir)ReleaseOutput.dll"
rename "$(TargetPath)" "ReleaseOutput.dll"

:End

Change DebugOutput.dll and ReleaseOutput.dll to the proper filenames. you can change "Debug" and "Release" to support other configurations, and add sections to support more configurations.


That script will create two dlls with different file names; to create two different AssemblyNames, you have two options.

The assembly name is built as follows:

Name <,Culture = CultureInfo> <,Version = Major.Minor.Build.Revision> <, StrongName> <,PublicKeyToken> '\0'

So you have to either change the culture info, the version or the strong name.

The two simplest options are:

  1. Change the assembly version:

    #if SOME_COMPILER_SYMBOL
    [assembly: AssemblyVersion("1.0.0.0")]
    #else
    [assembly: AssemblyVersion("1.0.0.1")]
    #endif
    
  2. Change the keyfile - create two keyfiles with the sn tool, and in AssemblyInfo.cs:

    #if SOME_COMPILER_SYMBOL
    [assembly: AssemblyKeyFile("FirstKey.snk")]
    #else
    [assembly: AssemblyKeyFile("SecondKey.snk")]
    #endif
    

Both these options will result in two different assemblies as far as the GAC knows - since it compares the full assembly name, and not the 'simple' name.

link|flag
your deleting it and then renaming it? You shouldn't have to delete it, just rename it. or am I missing something? :-) – chupacabra Mar 3 at 15:27
Could be that an older version still remains there. – Dave Van den Eynde Mar 3 at 15:39
Yes, the rename operation does not overwrite. You could use move /y "$(TargetPath)" "$(TargetDir)ReleaseOutput.dll" instead of the del-rename lines - the move operation can overwrite. – configurator Mar 3 at 16:03
This script is very good but it doesn't what I want. I tried to move to GAC both dll (the one and the renamed) and it didn't work. This is a good solution to rename dll's but not is the best. – jaloplo Mar 3 at 17:02
@jaloplo: See the edit for ways to make the GAC see two different files. – configurator Mar 3 at 19:12
show 6 more comments
vote up 3 vote down

Visual Studio does not allow per-configuration output filenames. However, you could rename the output file as part of your build script. You could do this in your MSBuild script for the particular project in question.

For example, put this at the end of your .csproj file:

<Target Name="AfterBuild">
    <Copy SourceFiles="$(OutputPath)\YourAssembly.dll" DestinationFiles="$(OutputPath)\YourAssemblyRenamed.dll"/>
    <Delete Files="$(OutputPath)\YourAssembly.dll"/>
</Target>

HTH, Kent

link|flag
Hi Kent, I think this is the solution for my problem but MSBuild doesn't have a command like <AssemblyName />. I wrote to Jay Shrestha from Microsoft and told me that in Visual Studio it's impossible do what I want. Instead of this, I'd have to use "msbuild.exe" to build the project. – jaloplo Mar 4 at 16:29
Visual Studio executes a specific MSBuild target after each build. Simply edit that target and use the appropriate MSBuild task to rename the file. – Kent Boogaart Mar 4 at 19:01
Updated my post to show you how. – Kent Boogaart Mar 4 at 19:35
This configuration is for Visual Studio 2008??? – jaloplo Mar 5 at 17:30
This part of the configuration is the same for VS 2005 and VS 2008. This is part of the .csproj file. – configurator Mar 5 at 18:57
show 2 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

I havn't tried this myself so take it as a friendly suggestion. Try manually editing your .csproj adding or uncommenting the BeforeBuild target with a snipped inspired from the following:

<Target Name="BeforeBuild">
    <AssemblyName Condition="'$(Configuration)' == 'Release'">MyReleaseName</AssemblyName>
    <AssemblyName Condition="'$(Configuration)' == 'Debug'">MyDebugName</AssemblyName>
</Target>
link|flag
vote up -1 vote down

I thinks there is no such way. Output assembly name is strictly fixed into Project settings: one assembly per one projects.

Also AssemblyAttributes you given only indicates visible assembly properties (for example in Windows Explorer), not it's file name.

link|flag
vote up -2 vote down

One project, one assembly.

I suggest you create two projects with the same code files in them, each configured for a different assembly output.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.