I have a solution which creates DLLs and a post-build xcopy that copies them to a target folder where another solution consumes them. I have noticed that all seems to be well but in fact the xcopy always copies the previous version instead of the freshly built one. This is Case A.
Even weirder (but possibly related): when I switched to a batch file to do the xcopy the build hangs. (B) And, finally, if I use a simple copy command in the batch file the build is successful, but again, the wrong version gets copied. (C)
Here are the pieces of the puzzle:
Case A directly in the post-build:
xcopy "$(ProjectDir)bin\Debug\PIC_TextBrowser.dll" "$(SolutionDir)..\ToolBox\ToolBox\bin\Debug\" /Y /I
Case B, a batchfile xcopy.bat call ed from the post-build:
xcopy "PIC_TextBrowser.dll" "D:\P\C#13\ToolBox\ToolBox\ToolBox\bin\Debug\" /Y /I
Case C, a batchfile xcopy.bat call ed from the post-build:
copy "PIC_TextBrowser.dll" "D:\P\C#13\ToolBox\ToolBox\ToolBox\bin\Debug\" /Y
The targets in the .csproj file look like this:
<Target Name="BuildPlugins">
<CSC Sources="PI_base.cs;PIC_TextBrowser.cs" TargetType="library" OutputAssembly="$(OutputPath)PIC_TextBrowser.dll" EmitDebugInformation="true" />
</Target>
<Target Name="AfterBuild" DependsOnTargets="BuildPlugins">
</Target>
<PropertyGroup>
<PostBuildEvent>call xcopy.bat
</PostBuildEvent>
Looks like the post-build event is not quite as 'post' as I thought. Any ideas, other than to live with it??
PATH
, it might be a problem to have a name clash between your filexcopy.bat
andxcopy.exe
. Rename your.bat
file and add echo statements to see what's going on and what the working directory is. Use full file paths to make sure that your script actually does copy the intended file.