78

I've read about this technique: Shared assembly info in VS projects - JJameson's blog

Basically it means to create a SharedAssemblyInfo.cs with versioning information about the assembly, and adding this file as Link to all projects of the solution, so the actual file resides only in 1 location on disk.

My question deals with 2 scenarios:

  1. Existing solution that doesn't use this mechanism: Is there a way to easily add the ShareAssemblyInfo to all projects? (lets say i have a solution with 50 projects).

  2. When creating a new project, by default a new AssemblyInfo.cs is created. However i'd like to link automatically to the SharedAssemblyInfo as well.

Is there any solution for this? what is the common practice?

1
  • common practice is create unique assembly info
    – VMAtm
    Jul 21, 2011 at 5:48

4 Answers 4

73

It is possible to link to a shared assembly info file in VS 2010. Ashish Jain has a good blog post about it: Sharing assembly version across projects in a solution.

After creating the shared assembly info file at the solution level, his instructions for linking to it from a project are:

  1. Right click on the project, in which you wish to add the Shared assembly file, and select Add -> Existing Item...

  2. Select the file “SharedAssemblyInfo.cs” from the solution folder.

  3. Instead of Add, click on the the arrow next to Add and click “Add as Link”

  4. Drag down the added linked file alongside AssemblyInfo.cs in the same folder.

  5. Repeat steps 1 – 4 for all projects for which you wish to add shared assembly file.

I've tried this and it works.

4
  • 4
    Thank you for explaining about the little arrow I had overlooked! Oct 2, 2013 at 19:25
  • 12
    There is no need to repeat step 1-4. You could just drag the linked file from your first project to the next. This will copy the link file to the next project.
    – ristaloff
    Oct 8, 2015 at 13:03
  • 2
    You can do it also by replacing text in all *.csproj files. Update one project and compare result in new and old csproj file and appy on all other projects in your solution ;)
    – Ludwo
    Jan 25, 2016 at 11:53
  • 1
    This is a much better answer than the accepted answer. Something like this should be build into visual studio due to how simple it would be to implement.
    – rollsch
    Jan 19, 2017 at 4:37
55

First point could be solved with simple text editor that could handle several files at once and find/replace. Just open all of your csproj in it and replace string <Compile Include="Properties\AssemblyInfo.cs" /> with

<Compile Include="..\SharedAssemblyInfo.cs">
  <Link>Properties\SharedAssemblyInfo.cs</Link>
</Compile>

Alternatively you could write a utility like that:

var files = Directory.GetFiles(yourSolutionDir, "*.csproj", SearchOption.AllDirectories);
foreach (var f in files) {
  string contents = File.ReadAllText(f);
  string result = contents.Replace("<Compile Include=\"Properties\\AssemblyInfo.cs\" />", putSecondStringHere_ItIsJustTooLong); // :)
  File.WriteAllText(f, contents);
}

As for the second question... You could take a look at Visual Studio custom project templates , but I'm not sure it worth the efforts. You should IMO write test that will check this instead. It will be much simpler and outcome is actually almost the same.

UPD: About writing tests for checking solution/project files against some custom rules. Basically, sln/csproj format is simple enough to be parseable without much efforts. So if you want to have SharedAssemblyInfo.cs linked into every project - just parse csproj's and check that. Then put that checker in your build server and run it on each build. We have such system working currently and it costs something about two days to write but saved us many more (we have there more sophisticated rules and multi-solution project, so it was worth the efforts).

I won't write about this checking in detail here right now (it is not that short), but I'm going to write blog post about it soon - most probably till the end of this week. So, if you're interested - just check my blog soon :)

UPD: Here it is.

3
  • #1 - i agree this can be done with a text editor. I was wondering is VS itself supports this somehow. (btw - is EditPad Pro better than Notepad++ in your opinion?) #2 - what do u mean by write a test that will check this instead? Jul 21, 2011 at 7:07
  • Yes, EditPad Pro is better IMO. At least it certainly was better when I checked N++ last time. It is also not freeware, so you should think yourself do you need it. Jul 21, 2011 at 7:10
  • I've updated the answer with some details about your second point. Jul 21, 2011 at 7:17
0

This does not work for solution that has both C# and F# projects. c# project cannot reference shared f# file and vice versa.

The only option in this case is to make a separate project and refer to it from other projects

0

I have created an application to increment the file version automatically.

  1. Download Application
  2. add the following line to pre-build event command line

C:\temp\IncrementFileVersion.exe $(SolutionDir)\Properties\AssemblyInfo.cs Build the project To keep it simple the app only throws messages if there is an error, to confirm it worked fine you will need to check the file version in 'Assembly Information'

Note : You will have to reload the solution in Visual studio for 'Assembly Information' button to populate the fields, however your output file will have the updated version.

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