6

I am calling a .net standard 2.0 library from a framework 4.7.2 test project sucessfully. references

If I take my .net standard 2.0 dll (SBD.Standard) and create a new winforms project that references it then I get asked to add

Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore, 
then Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.SqlServer, 
then Microsoft.Data.SqlClient 

and then my project runs successfully. (Although it would be ideal if the extra packages were added automatically)

enter image description here

However trouble occurs if I try to distribute my library via a Nuget Package built using Azure DevOps.

However when I distribute the standard library via Nuget ( Using Azure DevOps to create the Nuget ) and include it in a new project I have an error.

The call stack is

System.IO.FileNotFoundException : Could not load file or assembly 'Microsoft.Data.SqlClient, Version=1.0.19269.1, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=23ec7fc2d6eaa4a5' or one of its dependencies. The system cannot find the file specified.
   at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.SqlServer.Storage.Internal.SqlServerConnection.CreateDbConnection()
   at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Storage.RelationalConnection.get_DbConnection()
   at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Storage.RelationalCommand.CreateCommand(RelationalCommandParameterObject parameterObject, Guid commandId, DbCommandMethod commandMethod)
   at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Storage.RelationalCommand.ExecuteReader(RelationalCommandParameterObject parameterObject)
   at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Query.Internal.QueryingEnumerable`1.Enumerator.InitializeReader(DbContext _, Boolean result)
   at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.SqlServer.Storage.Internal.SqlServerExecutionStrategy.Execute[TState,TResult](TState state, Func`3 operation, Func`3 verifySucceeded)
   at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Query.Internal.QueryingEnumerable`1.Enumerator.MoveNext()
   at System.Linq.Enumerable.SingleOrDefault[TSource](IEnumerable`1 source)
   at SBD.Standard.Helpers.HandyFuncs.QueueCommand(ApiDbContext connect, WorkTypeEnum workType, String 

The line of code that is causing the issue is

public static int QueueCommand(ApiDbContext connect, WorkTypeEnum workType, string description, int jobId, int signature, XElement elem)
{
    var command =
        connect.EngineCommandQueues.SingleOrDefault(
            c =>
                (c.Status == 0|| c.Status == 2) &&
                c.Signature == signature);

I did find that I needed to install the following packages

Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore 3.1.1
Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.SqlServer 3.1.1 which has a dependency on Microsoft.Data.SqlClient >=1.019269.1

I see that Microsoft.Data.SQLClient v1.0.19269.1 is intalled

I tried installing System.Linq

I see the note in Nuget for Microsoft.Data.SqlClient

When running on Windows, this library has a dependency on Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SNI on .NET Framework

and have Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SNI v1.0.19235.1 installed

I tried upgrading Microsoft.Data.SqlClient to 1.1 and the error changed to

System.TypeInitializationException: The type initializer for 'Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.TdsParser' threw an exception. ---> System.TypeInitializationException: The type initializer for 'Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SNILoadHandle' threw an exception. ---> System.TypeInitializationException: The type initializer for 'Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SNINativeMethodWrapper' threw an exception. ---> System.ComponentModel.Win32Exception: Failed to load C:\Dev2\Combridge\SBD.ComBridge\UnitTestProjectStandard\bin\Debug\x86\SNI.dll ---> System.ComponentModel.Win32Exception: The specified module could not be found
    at Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SNINativeMethodWrapper..cctor() in E:\agent1\_work\31\s\src\Microsoft.Data.SqlClient\netfx\src\Microsoft\Data\Interop\SNINativeMethodWrapper.cs:line 64
--- End of inner exception stack trace ---
    at Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SNINativeMethodWrapper.SNIInitialize()
   at Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SNILoadHandle..ctor() in E:\agent1\_work\31\s\src\Microsoft.Data.SqlClient\netfx\src\Microsoft\Data\SqlClient\TdsParserSafeHandles.cs:line 36
   at Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SNILoadHandle..cctor() in E:\agent1\_work\31\s\src\Microsoft.Data.SqlClient\netfx\src\Microsoft\Data\SqlClient\TdsParserSafeHandles.cs:line 17
--- End of inner exception stack trace ---
    at Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.TdsParser..cctor() in E:\agent1\_work\31\s\src\Microsoft.Data.SqlClient\netfx\src\Microsoft\Data\SqlClient\TdsParser.cs:line 166
--- End of inner exception stack trace ---
    at Microsoft.Data.ProviderBase.DbConnectionPool.TryGetConnection(DbConnection owningObject, UInt32 waitForMultipleObjectsTimeout, Boolean allowCreate, Boolean onlyOneCheckConnection, DbConnectionOptions userOptions, DbConnectionInternal& connection) in E:\agent1\_work\31\s\src\Microsoft.Data.SqlClient\netfx\src\Microsoft\Data\ProviderBase\DbConnectionPool.cs:line 1411
   at Microsoft.Data.ProviderBase.DbConnectionPool.TryGetConnection(DbConnection owningObject, TaskCompletionSource`1 retry, DbConnectionOptions userOptions, DbConnectionInternal& connection) in E:\agent1\_work\31\s\src\Microsoft.Data.SqlClient\netfx\src\Microsoft\Data\ProviderBase\DbConnectionPool.cs:line 1310
   at Microsoft.Data.ProviderBase.DbConnectionFactory.TryGetConnection(DbConnection owningConnection, TaskCompletionSource`1 retry, DbConnectionOptions userOptions, DbConnectionInternal oldConnection, DbConnectionInternal& connection) in E:\agent1\_work\31\s\src\Microsoft.Data.SqlClient\netfx\src\Microsoft\Data\ProviderBase\DbConnectionFactory.cs:line 357
   at Microsoft.Data.ProviderBase.DbConnectionInternal.TryOpenConnectionInternal(DbConnection outerConnection, DbConnectionFactory connectionFactory, TaskCompletionSource`1 retry, DbConnectionOptions userOptions) in E:\agent1\_work\31\s\src\Microsoft.Data.SqlClient\netfx\src\Microsoft\Data\ProviderBase\DbConnectionInternal.cs:line 773
   at Microsoft.Data.ProviderBase.DbConnectionClosed.TryOpenConnection(DbConnection outerConnection, DbConnectionFactory connectionFactory, TaskCompletionSource`1 retry, DbConnectionOptions userOptions) in E:\agent1\_work\31\s\src\Microsoft.Data.SqlClient\netfx\src\Microsoft\Data\ProviderBase\DbConnectionClosed.cs:line 72
   at Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection.TryOpenInner(TaskCompletionSource`1 retry) in E:\agent1\_work\31\s\src\Microsoft.Data.SqlClient\netfx\src\Microsoft\Data\SqlClient\SqlConnection.cs:line 1860
   at Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection.TryOpen(TaskCompletionSource`1 retry) in E:\agent1\_work\31\s\src\Microsoft.Data.SqlClient\netfx\src\Microsoft\Data\SqlClient\SqlConnection.cs:line 1853
   at Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection.Open() in E:\agent1\_work\31\s\src\Microsoft.Data.SqlClient\netfx\src\Microsoft\Data\SqlClient\SqlConnection.cs:line 1421
   at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Storage.RelationalConnection.OpenDbConnection(Boolean errorsExpected)
   at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Storage.RelationalConnection.Open(Boolean errorsExpected)
   at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Storage.RelationalCommand.ExecuteReader(RelationalCommandParameterObject parameterObject)
   at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Query.Internal.QueryingEnumerable`1.Enumerator.InitializeReader(DbContext _, Boolean result)
   at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.SqlServer.Storage.Internal.SqlServerExecutionStrategy.Execute[TState,TResult](TState state, Func`3 operation, Func`3 verifySucceeded)
   at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Query.Internal.QueryingEnumerable`1.Enumerator.MoveNext()
   at System.Linq.Enumerable.SingleOrDefault[TSource](IEnumerable`1 source)
   at lambda_method(Closure , QueryContext )
   at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Query.Internal.QueryCompiler.Execute[TResult](Expression query)
   at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Query.Internal.EntityQueryProvider.Execute[TResult](Expression expression)
   at System.Linq.Queryable.FirstOrDefault[TSource](IQueryable`1 source)

[Update] Reading This GitHub post it seems it could have something to do with Azure Devops

The post mentions

Win32Exception: Failed to load C:__source_code\repo1\Simplified\bin\x86\SNI.dll So it's trying to load the 32 bit version of sni.dll and it isn't present.

That makes me suspect that you build it on a 64 bit system and then just transferred the files to the other machine. You need to publish the project for an x86 target to get the right native dependency resolved. Give it a try.

I am running Windows 10 so I dont see why it would be trying to load a 32 bit version of sni.dll

I can see in the Azure Artifiacts

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SNI 1.0.19235.1

[Update]

I see from this question that I need to force MSBuild to create / update a YourProject.dll.config file containing the necessary binding redirects. So Nuget should be creating that config file too. I wonder how that effects things.

My azure-pipelines.yml is

# .NET Desktop
# Build and run tests for .NET Desktop or Windows classic desktop solutions.
# Add steps that publish symbols, save build artifacts, and more:
# https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/devops/pipelines/apps/windows/dot-net

trigger:
- master

pool:
  vmImage: 'windows-latest'

variables:
  solution: '**/*.sln'
  buildPlatform: 'Any CPU'
  buildConfiguration: 'Release'
  Major: '2'
  Minor: '0'
  Patch: '0'

steps:
- task: NuGetToolInstaller@0
  inputs:
    versionSpec: '>=4.3.0'
    checkLatest: true

- task: NuGetCommand@2
  inputs:
    restoreSolution: '$(solution)'

- task: VSBuild@1
  inputs:
    solution: '$(solution)'
    platform: '$(buildPlatform)'
    configuration: '$(buildConfiguration)'

- task: NuGetCommand@2
  inputs:
    command: pack
    packagesToPack: '**/*.csproj'
    versioningScheme: byPrereleaseNumber
    majorVersion: '$(Major)'
    minorVersion: '$(Minor)'
    patchVersion: '$(Patch)'

- task: NuGetCommand@2
  inputs:
    command: pack
    packagesToPack: '**/*.vbproj'
    versioningScheme: byPrereleaseNumber
    majorVersion: '$(Major)'
    minorVersion: '$(Minor)'
    patchVersion: '$(Patch)'

- task: NuGetCommand@2
  displayName: 'NuGet push'
  inputs:
    command: push
    publishVstsFeed: 'SBDCommonFeed'
    allowPackageConflicts: true

[Update]

I tried changing the yaml to use dotnet pack but get an error

error

[Update]

I tried replacing the pack section of the yaml with

- task: DotNetCoreCLI@2
  inputs:
    command: 'pack'
    selectOrConfig: 'config'
    nugetConfigPath: '$(System.DefaultWorkingDirectory)/NuGet.config'
    externalEndpoints: $(externalFeedCredential)

Now I get resource authorization issue Resource Authorization Issue

When I click the button to authorize I get a message: insufficient permissions or missing resources. Even though I am logged in as the repository owner.

I guess I need to learn what to put in externalEndpoints

[Update]

I tried this instead

- task: DotNetCoreCLI@2
  inputs: 
    command: 'pack'
    outputDir: '$(Build.ArtifactStagingDirectory)/TestDir'

Now the error becomes

 error MSB4057: The target "pack" does not exist in the project.

investigating this answer

11

4 Answers 4

3

Although it would be ideal if the extra packages were added automatically.

Assuming we have one .net standard project which depends on Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore, Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.SqlServer and other packages. The expected behavior for us is to create a nuget package in whose xx.nuspec file has definitions about the dependencies.

But there's one issue about nuget pack command, it can't work well for .net core/standard project. Both nuget pack and dotnet pack can create .net standard nuget packages successfully, but pack successfully doesn't mean good package.

With the effect of the issue above, package created by nuget pack will lose some dependencies in Package.nuspec file. (Rename xx.nupkg to xx.zip, then we can check the content inside package, we'll see the xx.nuspec file)

And above step can cause runtime error like missing assembly. So to make it ideal that the extra packages are added automatically and avoid missing reference, we recommend dotnet pack command for projects using PackageReference format. (No matter dotnet pack command locally or dotnet pack task in Azure Devops Piepilne)

3
2

I resolved the error by updating my test project with the package reference.

Specifically, I edited my project file to include the line below:

  <ItemGroup>
    ...
    <PackageReference Include="Microsoft.Data.SqlClient" Version="5.0.1" />
  </ItemGroup>
1

just hit the same error with ASP.NET 4.7.2 (updated from net 4.6) project which reference netstandard 2.0 project (ef core 3.x). (on azure app service)

after trying to clean/rebuild/nuget reinstall .. i removed everything from app service and published project again. error dismissed.

1

As mentioned in the error, this issue occur due to a version difference between the version expected by the application and the version you have installed.

To resolve the version issue, in Visual Studio, right click on the solution and go to Manage NuGet Packages for Solution option and then go to the Updates tab, search and select the reference that you have the issue with. Then upgrade/downgrade it to the version given in the error. (You might have to disable the package source temporarily from the NuGet option to do this.) To check whether you have installed the correct version of the reference, right click on the reference and go to Properties and check the version.

If the version is still not updated you may have to add it manually. To do this, in the solution explorer, right click on the references and go to Add reference option. Then select Browse. You will be directed to the file explorer. From there go to the project -> src -> packages -> reference name -> lib -> .net version and select the dll file for the reference. Then the reference will be correctly added.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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