I have a single project that is compiling multiple classes into separate .dlls in separate directories at build time. Each class has its own Assembly information defined outside the namespace for the class, e.g.
[assembly: AssemblyVersion("1.0.0.0")]
[assembly: AssemblyFileVersion("1.0.0.0")]
[assembly: AssemblyDescription("SomeDescription")]
This is so that after the solution has been built, I can create .nuspec files based on each of the .dlls and then create .nupkg files based off those .nuspec files.
This all works perfectly using VS2013, however our build machine uses VS2015 which complains that there is duplicate AssemblyVersion, AssemblyFileVersion etc etc. defined and the build fails.
Is there a way of allowing this setup to be built in VS2015 that I'm missing? For reference this is the MSBuild Targets I have setup to perform the .dll creation:
<ItemGroup>
<BuiltDll Include="Thing\Foo\Bar.cs" />
<BuiltDll Include="Thing1\Hello\There.cs" />
<BuiltDll Include="Thing2\How\Ironic.cs" />
</ItemGroup>
<Target Name="CreateDirectories">
<MakeDir Directories="$(OutputPath)%(BuiltDll.Filename)"></MakeDir>
</Target>
<Target Name="BuildDllsRelease">
<GetReferenceAssemblyPaths BypassFrameworkInstallChecks="False"
TargetFrameworkMoniker=".NETFramework,Version=v4.0">
<Output TaskParameter="FullFrameworkReferenceAssemblyPaths"
PropertyName="path" />
</GetReferenceAssemblyPaths>
<CSC Sources="@(BuiltDll)" TargetType="library"
References="@(PluginReference)"
Resources="@(ManifestResourceWithNoCulture);
@(ManifestNonResxWithNoCultureOnDisk);
@(CompiledLicenseFile);"
OutputAssembly="$(OutputPath)%(BuiltDll.Filename)\%
(BuiltDll.FileName).dll" EmitDebugInformation="false" />
</Target>
<Target Name="BuildDllsDebug">
<GetReferenceAssemblyPaths BypassFrameworkInstallChecks="False"
TargetFrameworkMoniker=".NETFramework,Version=v4.0">
<Output TaskParameter="FullFrameworkReferenceAssemblyPaths"
PropertyName="path" />
</GetReferenceAssemblyPaths>
<CSC Sources="@(BuiltDll)" TargetType="library"
References="@(PluginReference)"
Resources="@(ManifestResourceWithNoCulture);
@(ManifestNonResxWithNoCultureOnDisk);@(CompiledLicenseFile);"
OutputAssembly="$(OutputPath)%(BuiltDll.FileName).dll"
EmitDebugInformation="false" />
</Target>
<Target Name="AfterBuild">
<CallTarget Condition="'$(Configuration)' == 'Debug'"
Targets="BuildDllsDebug">
</CallTarget>
<CallTarget Condition="'$(Configuration)' == 'Release'"
Targets="CreateDirectories;BuildDllsRelease">
</CallTarget>
</Target>
The only other alternatives I can think is to have a separate project for each file I want a dll for (but this will mean upwards of 20 new projects) or creating the nuspec file manually and having it in the solution rather than after the build.