255

Periodically I am getting the following exception:

Unable to load DLL 'SQLite.Interop.dll': The specified module could not be found. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x8007007E)

I am using 1.0.82.0. version, installing it with nuget in VS2010, OS Win7 64.

Once exception starts to appear, it appears constantly - in debug and release and running application within or outside VS.

The only way to stop it is logoff and logon. The exception is not thrown and dll is loaded. It can work for days, but then it can break again.

Has anyone seen something like this and is there a solution for it?

8
  • 2
    Yes, it's set to copy always. I have x64 and x86 folders in bin/debug. And it works mostly, but sometimes just stops to work. Probably something is blocking the access to the dll, I will try to find it out next time it stops to work. As I said it may work days without any problems.
    – xll
    Oct 23, 2012 at 14:18
  • 19
    I got this error right out of the box after adding the SQLite nuget package to a new console project. Manually copying SQLite.Interop.dll from the x86 folder up one level allows the app to run. Seems strange to me that this would be so broken.
    – lesscode
    Dec 22, 2012 at 4:53
  • @Wayne Yes, this definitely helps. But in my case, we are working together on the project, and my friend is using x86, while me x64 OS. And as I noticed, it just stops to work sometimes. Though it didnt happen to me last month.
    – xll
    Dec 22, 2012 at 9:03
  • 1
    If you download correct binary for SQLite then copy SQLite.Interop.dll into your Release or Debug folder according to your project build option.
    – Elshan
    Mar 2, 2014 at 7:43
  • This is such a random bug... sometimes it occurs and sometimes it doesn't for my project. Tried everything.
    – B.K.
    Oct 20, 2014 at 4:53

49 Answers 49

158

I know I'm late to the party but I had this issue right after I pulled down latest x86/x64 today (version 1.0.88.0). My local IIS in VS2012 runs 32bit by default and there's no easy way to switch to x64. My production server runs 64bit.

Anyway I installed the NuGet package to a DLL project and I got this error. What I had to do to get it working I had to install it to the main site project, too. Even if it doesn't touch SQLite classes at all.

My guess is that SQLite uses the entry assembly to detect which version of Interop to load.

11
  • 14
    It worked for me after I added the reference to SQLite Core with NuGet to the main project. May 20, 2015 at 22:51
  • Adding sqllite.core to main project worked for me on my WPF solution
    – Dipu Raj
    Oct 21, 2016 at 6:35
  • I had to do both install-package Sqlite as well as Install-Package System.Data.SQLite.Core into my website even though the db calls are in a library...
    – user1941432
    Dec 16, 2016 at 1:31
  • 4
    What do you mean by "main site" project? In my case I am doing desktop work. Do you mean the "startup" project? Dec 17, 2018 at 13:40
  • 1
    Well you're right and it is not ideal. I tried to copy the interop dll from the post build event and it doesn't even work. These dll seem to appear in the x86/x64 AFTER the post-build event is called .. somewhat useless.
    – DarkUrse
    Mar 11, 2019 at 9:15
89

I had this problem because a dll I was using had Sqlite as a dependency (configured in NuGet with only the Sqlite core package.). The project compiles and copies all the Sqlite dll-s except the 'SQLite.Interop.dll' (both x86 and x64 folder).

The solution was very simple: just add the System.Data.SQLite.Core package as a dependency (with NuGet) to the project you are building/running and the dll-s will be copied.

10
  • 2
    Tried quite a few solutions posted here, this one actually worked out best.
    – Batman
    Aug 26, 2015 at 17:24
  • 2
    How can you add a dependency like that? never done it (VS2013)
    – jpgrassi
    Sep 2, 2015 at 18:15
  • 7
    Go to Tools -> NuGet Package Manager -> Manage NuGet Packages for Solution... -> Online -> All. Then Search for sqlite and add System.Data.SQLite Core (x86/x64).
    – Marin
    Sep 4, 2015 at 11:22
  • 1
    Did you mean"System.Data.SQLite.Core" ? I don't see any package called "Sqlite.Core". Thanks Dec 17, 2018 at 13:46
  • 3
    Also, I think SQLite Core is installed. and yet fails :( Feb 14, 2019 at 6:33
86

So, after adding the NuGet the deployment doesn't copy down the Interops. You can add this to your csproj file and it should fix that behavior:

 <PropertyGroup> 
    <ContentSQLiteInteropFiles>true</ContentSQLiteInteropFiles>
    <CopySQLiteInteropFiles>false</CopySQLiteInteropFiles>
    <CleanSQLiteInteropFiles>false</CleanSQLiteInteropFiles>
    <CollectSQLiteInteropFiles>false</CollectSQLiteInteropFiles>
 </PropertyGroup>

If you look in the source for NuGet for SQLite you can see what these are doing specifically. This allowed me to get a deploy working with ASP.Net Core.

6
  • 13
    ContentSQLiteInteropFiles is the answer. Most of the top answers are guesswork.
    – Corey Alix
    Nov 20, 2018 at 15:38
  • 7
    Yes, ContentSQLiteInteropFiles is the answer. 1. This should be the accepted answer 2. On the other hand, it should be investigated, that as a nuget package how to make this work automatically, or at least document the need for this configuration.
    – gerleim
    May 3, 2019 at 11:20
  • Should be the accepted answer. Super simple. 1. unload project 2. add the above to csproj 3. reload project. it's that easy...
    – BillRuhl
    Apr 28, 2020 at 16:37
  • 2
    Note that this solution is for "old" style projects only. For an answer that works for "new" style projects too, see stackoverflow.com/a/60176344/448129 May 5, 2021 at 18:05
  • How does one arrive at such a solution? Is there some documentation as to what exactly adding this code does? Would very much appreciate more info.
    – tutiplain
    Aug 31, 2021 at 15:44
50

I had this same problem when using SQLite in a WPF project whose platform target was Any CPU. I fixed it by following the following steps:

  1. Open the project designer in Visual Studio. Details on how to do it can be found here.
  2. Click on the Build tab.
  3. Disable the prefer 32-bit option.

Alternatively, you could just set the platform target to x86 or x64. I think this problem is caused by the System.Data.SQLite library using the platform target to get the location of the 'SQLite.Interop.dll' file.

UPDATE:

In case the project designer cannot be reached, just open the project (*.csproj) file from a text editor and add the value <Prefer32Bit>false</Prefer32Bit> into the <PropertyGroup>...</PropertyGroup> tag.

Example code

<PropertyGroup>
    <Configuration Condition=" '$(Configuration)' == '' ">Debug</Configuration>
    <Platform Condition=" '$(Platform)' == '' ">AnyCPU</Platform>
    <ProjectGuid>[Set by Visual Studio]</ProjectGuid>
    <OutputType>Exe</OutputType>
    <AppDesignerFolder>Properties</AppDesignerFolder>
    <RootNamespace>[Set by Visual Studio]</RootNamespace>
    <AssemblyName>[Set by Visual Studio]</AssemblyName>
    <TargetFrameworkVersion>v4.5</TargetFrameworkVersion>
    <FileAlignment>[Set by Visual Studio]</FileAlignment>
    <!--Add the line below to your project file. Leave everything else untouched-->
    <Prefer32Bit>false</Prefer32Bit>
</PropertyGroup>
7
  • I am using VS 2010, there is no such option.
    – xll
    Mar 4, 2013 at 8:01
  • @xll, I edited the answer for clarification. Check if the edit clears things up. Mar 5, 2013 at 19:41
  • 10
    In VS2012 this option is grayed out for me.
    – Kugel
    Sep 1, 2013 at 13:02
  • 7
    The option is only enabled on EXE projects, but I think most of us have this issue with unit test projects.
    – Brannon
    Oct 2, 2014 at 14:33
  • 1
    Was greyed out for me in a WPF project in VS Pro 2015. .csproj file had it set to false already, but still had the error.
    – vapcguy
    Feb 1, 2017 at 23:45
34

This is how I fixed it in my project.

It was working, and when a colleague submitted his changes, I received the "Unable to load DLL 'SQLite.Interop.dll'" exception.

Diffing the project's .csproj file, this was in the NON-WORKING version:

<ItemGroup>
     <Content Include="x64\SQLite.Interop.dll" />
     <Content Include="x86\SQLite.Interop.dll" />
</ItemGroup>

And this is what the WORKING version had:

<ItemGroup>
     <Content Include="x64\SQLite.Interop.dll">
          <CopyToOutputDirectory>Always</CopyToOutputDirectory>
      </Content>
      <Content Include="x86\SQLite.Interop.dll">
          <CopyToOutputDirectory>Always</CopyToOutputDirectory>
      </Content>
</ItemGroup>

After reverting back, I didn't receive the exception. The DLL files were dumped in the appropriate Debug\x64 (etc) folders.

4
  • <itemgroup> for "SQLite.Interop.dll" is not there in project's .csproj file. still i tried to add your solution but didn't work :(
    – aru
    Mar 28, 2015 at 9:13
  • This will not work in VS2012, the elements do not exist.
    – htm11h
    Aug 27, 2015 at 18:14
  • Thank you very much. Works in 2015 vs. Dec 14, 2017 at 10:56
  • 2
    I tried using a <copy> based on the build type but it was not working for unit tests. The OutDir was not correct. By copying the "x86" and "x64" folders I guess sqlite (or maybe .net) found what it needed. Thank you so much!
    – Corey Alix
    Sep 14, 2020 at 22:26
27

When you get in this state, try performing a Rebuild-All. If this fixes the problem, you may have the same issue I had.

Some background (my understanding):

  • SQLite has 1 managed assembly (System.Data.SQLite.dll) and several platform specific assemblies (SQLite.Interop.dll). When installing SQLite with Nuget, Nuget will add the platform specific assemblies to your project (within several folders: \x86, \x64), and configures these dlls to "Copy Always".

  • Upon load, the managed assembly will search for platform specific assemblies inside the \x86 and \x64 folders. You can see more on that here. The exception is this managed assembly attempting to find the relevant (SQLite.Interop.dll) inside these folders (and failing).

My Scenario:

I have 2 projects in my solution; a WPF app, and a class library. The WPF app references the class library, and the class library references SQLite (installed via Nuget).

The issue for me was when I modify only the WPF app, VS attempts to do a partial rebuild (realizing that the dependent dll hasn't changed). Somewhere in this process, VS cleans the content of the \x86 and \x64 folders (blowing away SQLite.Interop.dll). When I do a full Rebuild-All, VS copies the folders and their contents correctly.

My Solution:

To fix this, I ended up adding a Post-Build process using xcopy to force copying the \x86 and \x64 folders from the class library to my WPF project \bin directory.

Alternatively, you could do fancier things with the build configuration / output directories.

4
  • 1
    The message I got was telling me that those files were missing but I thought it was a permission issue. Once I saw your message i realized they never actually made it to the server when I deployed.
    – Stradas
    Feb 12, 2015 at 21:39
  • 1
    My near identical solution was to add x86 and x64 folders to my startup project, then add the x86 interop and x64 interop files within their respective folders. I set the files' option to "content" and "build always." This is the only way I could get my Windows Forms app to connect to an embedded s3db database file when I deployed the app with ClickOnce to other PC's. Frustratingly, I didn't have an SQLite error when I developed and tested the app on my PC. Mar 25, 2016 at 2:45
  • Still happening with VS 2017 :'(
    – wmebane
    May 11, 2018 at 18:54
  • 1
    This is the answer that helps me understand my problem, although my fix is a bit different. My problem is that I added the system.data.Sqlite.dll manually. In this way the Sqlite.Interop.dll is not automatically copied to \x86 and x64. The fix is to delete the reference and add it by Nuget.
    – Susan Wang
    Aug 30, 2018 at 0:23
19

I had the same issue running Visual Studio Express 2013. I tried several solutions mentioned here and elsewhere to no avail. I hope this fix helps others.

I fixed it by using the DeploymentItem attribute on my test class that tests the SQLite-based service.

Example:

[TestClass]
[DeploymentItem(@"x86\SQLite.Interop.dll", "x86")] // this is the key
public class LocalStoreServiceTests
{

    [TestMethod]
    public void SomeTestThatWasFailing_DueToThisVeryIssue()
    {
         // ... test code here
    }
}

This causes the needed SQLite.Interop.dll to get copied to the x86 directory within the appropriate "TestResults" folder.

All is green. All is good.

3
  • 1
    This solution works only if you are using the Microsoft.VisualStudio.TestTools.UnitTesting namespace
    – sapbucket
    Sep 23, 2014 at 16:13
  • 4
    This is a correct solution if you're using MSTest. SQLite worked fine, finding the SQLite.Interop.dll with no issue, until I used DeploymentItem("some.csv") for a test. Including the .csv file in that way triggered MSTest to copy all referenced dlls over to the TestResults directory. Since SQLite.Interop.dll is not referenced in the project (and cannot be since it's unmanaged code), it never got copied over.
    – Johann
    Apr 16, 2015 at 23:56
  • Your best bet is to add two lines, one for each architecture. That protects you in the event the test runner happens to be running 64-bit.
    – Kirk Woll
    Oct 20, 2016 at 22:26
18

Updating NuGet from Tools -> Extension and updates and reinstalling SQLite.Core with the command PM> Update-Package -reinstall System.Data.SQLite.Core fixed it for me.

3
  • If you get an error when doing this, removing my SQLite DLLs/references and completely reinstalling them from nuget did the trick for me Jun 9, 2016 at 5:43
  • reinstall sqllite core help to me too. Occured at VS2012. VS didn't include x62 version to web deploy package Sep 1, 2016 at 8:07
  • Fixed for me too in VS2015 Professional. Sep 19, 2017 at 22:12
16

old project file format

i.e. projects beginning with <Project ToolsVersion="3.5" DefaultTargets="Build" xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/developer/msbuild/2003">

Add the following to your csproj on your "main"/root project

<PropertyGroup> 
    <ContentSQLiteInteropFiles>true</ContentSQLiteInteropFiles>
    <CopySQLiteInteropFiles>false</CopySQLiteInteropFiles>
    <CleanSQLiteInteropFiles>false</CleanSQLiteInteropFiles>
    <CollectSQLiteInteropFiles>false</CollectSQLiteInteropFiles>
</PropertyGroup>

new SDK project file format

i.e. projects beginning with <Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk.*">

Add PrivateAssets="none" to each ProjectReference/PackageImport in the dependency chain down to the System.Data.Sqlite PackageImport

ex:

<PackageReference Include="System.Data.SQLite.Core" Version="1.0.110" PrivateAssets="none"/>
2
  • ouput successfully show: Copying file from "..\packages\System.Data.SQLite.Core.1.0.105.2\build\net451\x64\SQLite.Interop.dll" to "XXProject\release\x64\SQLite.Interop.dll". Copying file from "..\packages\System.Data.SQLite.Core.1.0.105.2\build\net451\x86\SQLite.Interop.dll" to "XXProject\release\x86\SQLite.Interop.dll".
    – John Jang
    Jul 8, 2020 at 7:15
  • Please EVBD use this solution, and never just copying the dll manually!!
    – John Jang
    Jul 8, 2020 at 7:16
10

I had a similar issue in a multiple projects solution. The SQLite.Interop.dll was necessary for one of the plugins distributed with the software using ClickOnce.

As far as debugging in visual studio everything worked fine, but the deployed version was missing the folders x86/ and x64/ containing that DLL.

The solution to have it work after deployment using ClickOnce was to create in the startup project of the solution (also the one being published) these two subfolder, copy into them the DLLs and set them as Content Copy Always.

This way the ClickOnce publishing tool automatically includes these files and folders in the manifest and deploys the software with them

1
  • 1
    this was the only solution that worked for me... and boy.. was it a pain to debug when your app just closes on a user's pc.
    – stoic
    Apr 12, 2015 at 17:03
9

There are really a lot of answers here, but mine is simple and clear with no-GAC-playing-around.

The problem was, the executable File needs a copy of the right SQLite.Interop.dll (x86 or x64) to access our Database.

Mostly architectures have layers and in my case the Data Layer has the required DLL for SQLite Connection.

So i simple put a post build script into my Data Layer Solution and everything worked fine.


TL;DR;

  1. Set all Projects of your solution to x86 or x64 in the build options.

  2. Add following Post-Build-Script to the Project with the SQLite nuget Package:

    xcopy "$(TargetDir)x64" "$(SolutionDir)bin\Debug\" /y

Of course you have to change the script for Release Build and x86 builds.


STL;DR;

Put your SQLite.Interop.dll next to the *.exe File.

7

The default installation of the multi-architecture (x86, x64) version of SQLite from NuGet exhibits the behavior that you described. If you would like to load the correct version for actual architecture that the .NET runtime chose to run your application on your machine, then you can give the DLL loader a hint about where to locate the correct library as follows:

Add a declaration for the kernel32.dll function call to SetDLLDirectory() before your Program.Main():

    [System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImport("kernel32.dll", CharSet = System.Runtime.InteropServices.CharSet.Unicode, SetLastError = true)]
    [return: System.Runtime.InteropServices.MarshalAs(System.Runtime.InteropServices.UnmanagedType.Bool)]
    static extern bool SetDllDirectory(string lpPathName);

Then use your own method for determining the correct subdirectory to find the architecture specific version of 'SQLite.Interop.dll'. I use the following code:

    [STAThread]
    static void Main()
    {
        int wsize = IntPtr.Size;
        string libdir = (wsize == 4)?"x86":"x64";
        string appPath = System.IO.Path.GetDirectoryName(Application.ExecutablePath);
        SetDllDirectory(System.IO.Path.Combine(appPath, libdir));
0
5

even if it is an old post, I'd like to share the solution that I found here: http://system.data.sqlite.org/index.html/info/54e52d4c6f

If you don't want to read all the issue, the solution is to copy the file "msvcr100.dll" (that can be found in Windows\System32 directory) in the same path as SQLite.Interop.dll.

I would advice to read the issue to understand why, and to include the file in your setup but to install it only if the error occurs, I made it an optional component selectable in the setup options.

HTH, Formentz

2
  • 1
    Thanks so much for this, I tried everything else and this was the solution May 7, 2015 at 15:26
  • Thankyou. This solution fix my problem. Sep 8, 2020 at 10:39
5

I don't know why this has not been included yet, but I had to do the research and find this out for myself, so hopefully someone will find this answer and be saved the trouble. This was for a WPF app. It worked fine on my Dev box, but did not work on the computer where I was copying it and got the Unable to load DLL 'SQLite.Interop.dll' error. I ported over all of its associated directories and files, directly from my "Debug" folder to this other computer when I got the same error as the OP when I ran it. My "bin" folder that contained my DLLs had been copied to "Debug\bin" and all were included, along with my application files when I did my copying to the other computer using this path, so it was not missing any files.

Things I saw said in other answers that did not apply:

  • I did not use the NuGet package or need to create x86 or x64 folders that it seems that NuGet package creates. My DLLs (System.Data.SQLite and SQLite.Interop.dll, along with System.Data.SQLite.config) are in the "bin" folder in my project and were copied in manually (create "bin" folder in Solution Explorer in VS, paste DLLs into this folder in Windows Explorer, use Add > Existing Item to bring files into VS folder/project). Then I reference them as Referenced Assemblies in my project using that location ("References" > "Add Reference", and browse to one, rinse, repeat for the rest). This ensures my project knows exactly where they are.
  • I did not need to reference any SQLite DLL file in my app.config or even touch my MyProject.csproj file.
  • I did not even need to specify a particular processor! My project's build is for "Any CPU", even though I have only mixed or 64-bit DLLs and will only be running on Windows 7+, which are 64-bit OSes. (no x86-only/32-bit solely DLLs)
  • I was already specifying them as "Content" and "copy if newer" for these DLLs when I experienced the OP's error.

What I found was this, from https://system.data.sqlite.org/index.html/doc/trunk/www/faq.wiki#q20 :

(11) Why do I get a DllNotFoundException (for "sqlite3.dll" or "SQLite.Interop.dll") when trying to run my application?

Either the named dynamic link library (DLL) cannot be located or it cannot be loaded due to missing dependencies. Make sure the named dynamic link library is located in the application directory or a directory along the system PATH and try again. Also, be sure the necessary Visual C++ runtime redistributable has been installed unless you are using a dynamic link library that was built statically linked to it.

Emphasis mine on that bolded part inside the paragraph. The target computer was fresh and had no programs loaded except .NET 4.0. Once I installed C++, it was able to complete the commands to SQLite. This should have been one of the first FAQs and part of the pre-requisities, but it was buried at #11. My development computer already had it loaded because it came with Visual Studio, so that's why it worked, there.

Download:
Visual C++ Redistributable for Visual Studio 2015:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=48145

Update 3 (cumulative update):
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=53587

5

As the SQLite wiki says, your application deployment must be:

Application deployment

So you need to follow the rules. Find dll that matches your target platform and put it in location, describes in the picture. Dlls can be found in YourSolution/packages/System.Data.SQLite.Core.%version%/.

I had problems with application deployment, so I just added right SQLite.Interop.dll into my project, the added x86 folder to AppplicationFolder in setup project and added file references to dll.

5

I had the same issue. Please follow these steps:

  1. Make sure you have installed System.Data.SQLite.Core package by SQLite Development Team from NuGet.
  2. Go to project solution and try to locate build folder inside packages folder
  3. Check your project framework and pick the desired SQLite.Interop.dll and place it in your debug/release folder

Reference

1
  • Thanks, I was using different version of .net framework. The reference video was helpful.
    – Salman
    Dec 4, 2020 at 13:48
4

Copy "SQLite.Interop.dll" files for both x86 and x64 in debug folder. these files should copy into "x86" and "x64 folders in debug folder.

3

You could also get this error if you are trying to run a 32 bit dll, in a 64 bit project.

I got this when I have placed the same file(SQLite.Interop.dll in 32 bit version) in both the x86 and x64 folder.

3

If you download correct binary for SQLite then copy SQLite.Interop.dll into your Release or Debug folder according to your project build option.

3

I have started using Costura.Fody to package (.net) assemblies and embed and preload native dlls. This also helps later, with distribution as you can send one file.

  1. Install Costura Fody from Nuget.

  2. In your C# project create a folder called costrua32. In there add any native dlls you which C# to load.

  3. Once you have added them to this folder. Click on the properties window and change build action to "Embedded Resource"

  4. Finally you need to amend the XML file called FodyWeavers.xml as follows. Here I am specifying load the sql dll first. (note you drop the .dll)

    Weavers
     Costura
      PreloadOrder
       SQLite.Interop
       tbb_debug
       tbb
      /PreloadOrder>
     /Costura
    /Weavers
    

The advantage of this is that you do not have to write any pre or post build events, and the end product is totally encapsulated in to one larger file.

1
3

Also added the dll to the test project (through Nuget Manager) and it fixed it.

2

Could there be contention for the assembly? Check to see whether there's another application with a file lock on the DLL.

If this is the reason, it should be easy to use a tool like Sysinternal's Process Explorer to discover the offending program.

HTH, Clay

2

I had this problem because Visual C++ 2010 redistributable no installed in my PC.if you have not already installed Visual c++ 2010 redistributable Download and install this(check x86 or 64 dll).

2
2

I got the same problem. However, finally, I can fix it. Currently, I use Visual Studio 2013 Community Edition. I just use Add->Existing Item... and browse to where the SQLite.Data.SQLite files are in (my case is 'C:\Program Files (x86)\System.Data.SQLite\2013\bin'). Please don't forget to change type of what you will include to Assembly Files (*.dll; *.pdb). Choose 'SQLite.Interop.dll' in that folder. From there and then, I can continue without any problems at all. Good luck to you all. ^_^ P.S. I create web form application. I haven't tried in window form application or others yet.

0
2

Try to set the platform target to x86 or x64 (and not Any CPU) before you build: Project->Properties->Build->Platform target in Visual Studio.

2

Copy SQLite.Interop.dll in project directory.

src\
  project\
      bin\   <-- Past in bin
         x64\
           SQLite.Interop.dll <-- Copy this if 64
         x86\
           SQLite.Interop.dll <-- Copy this if 32
2
  • I had to give IIS_APPPOOL Edit permissions to Bin file to solve the problem. Just copying the ddl was causing an Access Denied to the dll
    – AlexanderD
    Oct 5, 2018 at 12:34
  • Adding these file has solved the issues, but this is a temporary solution. Nov 21, 2018 at 7:28
2

I've struggled with this for a long time, and, occasionally, I found that the test setting is incorrect. See this image: Test setting

I just uncheck the test setting, and the issue disappears. Otherwise, the exception will occurs. Hopefully, this will help someone. Not sure it's the root cause.

2
  • 1
    While this link may answer the question, it is better to include the essential parts of the answer here and provide the link for reference. Link-only answers can become invalid if the linked page changes. - From Review Oct 22, 2016 at 13:15
  • In my case, the testsettings file is wrong: <TestSettings ... <Deployment> <DeploymentItem filename="bin\Relase\a.test.dll" . the file location is wrong configured.
    – Tony Sun
    Oct 24, 2016 at 2:15
2

My application is a web application (ASP.NET MVC) and I had to change the application pool to run under LocalSystem instead of ApplicationPoolIdentity. To do this:

  1. Open IIS Manager
  2. Find the Application Pool your site is running under.
  3. Click Advanced Settings from the actions
  4. Change Identity to LocalSystem

I have no idea why this fixes the issue.

2

My situation was a little unique. I was running an application inside a docker container and kept getting the following error

System.DllNotFoundException : Unable to load shared library 'SQLite.Interop.dll' or one of its dependencies. In order to help diagnose loading problems, consider setting the LD_DEBUG environment variable: libSQLite.Interop.dll: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory

So I set LD_DEBUG=libs to find out what folders System.Data.SQLite.dll was looking in to find SQLite.Interop.dll.

You can find info on setting LD_DEBUG here: http://www.bnikolic.co.uk/blog/linux-ld-debug.html

Once I did that I realized that SQLite.Interop.dll was being found just fine. The DLL that wasn't being found was libSQLite.Interop.dll. I should have read the entire error message.

Hours of Googling later I found this guide on how to compile the missing DLL from the SQLite source code.

Note that the file that was actually missing was libSQLite.Interop.dll.so

Anyway when you compile the source code you get libSQLite.Interop.so which you need to rename to libSQLite.Interop.dll.so and put it in the directory that it's looking in which you can find by setting LD_DEBUG.

For me the directory that System.Data.SQLite.dll was looking in was /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/

1
  • This worked for me on a Linux machine, thanks!
    – akac
    Jan 28, 2021 at 11:53
2

Upgrading to Visual Studio 2019 ver. 16.10 caused the issue for me, where msbuild reported the following for the System.Data.SQLite.Core-package:

CopySQLiteInteropFiles:
Skipping target "CopySQLiteInteropFiles" because it has no outputs.

https://github.com/dotnet/msbuild/issues/6493

Microsoft says the bug has been fixed with ver. 16.10.4. Now just have to wait for AppVeyor to update their Visual Studio Images (Until then one can use Previous Visual Studio 2019).

Now AppVeyor is using broken dotnet-build-engine for both current and previous Visual Studio 2019-image. Now one have to explicit install dotnet sdk ver. 5.0.302:

Invoke-WebRequest -Uri 'https://dot.net/v1/dotnet-install.ps1' -UseBasicParsing -OutFile "$env:temp/dotnet-install.ps1"; & $env:temp\dotnet-install.ps1 -Architecture x64 -Version 5.0.302 -InstallDir "$env:ProgramFiles\dotnet"

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