25

I'm using Octopack / Nuspec file to build my nuget package.

I would like to exclude certain folders which exist in the project. e.g. the "obj" file. I've been trying to get the exclude tag to work, but haven't had any luck. The nuget file builds, but the folder is still there.

Sadly, all the examples on the net specific file types and not folder.

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<package xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/packaging/2010/07/nuspec.xsd">
  <metadata>
    <id>Foo</id>
    <title>Foo</title>
    <version>$version$</version>
    <authors>NA</authors>
    <owners>NA</owners>
    <licenseUrl>http://Foo</licenseUrl>
    <projectUrl>http://Foo</projectUrl>
    <requireLicenseAcceptance>false</requireLicenseAcceptance>
    <description>Foo</description>
    <releaseNotes>NA</releaseNotes>
  </metadata>
  <files>
    <file src="obj\**\*.*" exclude="*.*" />
  </files>
</package>
1
  • Can you describe for us which pieces you want to include in the package?
    – John Hoerr
    Jan 22, 2013 at 15:41

3 Answers 3

39

I needed to create a WebApplication, but deploy it as a standard ASP.NET website using "CodeFile" attributes.

This was basically to update a page in the standard ADFS login site.

<files>
  <file src="**" exclude="**\*.dll;**\*.designer.cs;**\*.csproj;**\*.pdb;**\*.user;**\*.vspscc;bin\*.cs;bin\*.aspx;bin\*.config;bin\*.asax;bin\*.pubxml" />
</files>
3
  • 1
    Are you required to use NuGet for this? I wonder if a Web Deploy package might be a little better fit for what you're trying to accomplish.
    – John Hoerr
    Jan 23, 2013 at 1:06
  • 1
    Yeah. We needed to use octopus deploy so nuget was a requirement.
    – Kye
    Jan 23, 2013 at 10:42
  • I was tried to use this solution. but unfortunately, nothing has happened? Aug 17, 2021 at 12:54
11

To directly answer the posters question, if you want to exclude only the obj folder from a Nuget package use the following in your nuspec xml

<files>
    <file src="*\**" target="\" exclude="obj\**\*.*"/>
</files>
1
  • This had a lot of side efftects. May 5, 2021 at 7:20
1

Depending on the project you are building, you shouldn't need to exclude anything.

If you are building a Windows Service/Console application, OctoPack should only package your bin\release directory.

If you are building a web application, you should use a 'publish' command to have MSBuild sent the binaries and content files to a temporary folder, and OctoPack will package that. This way your obj folders and C# files won't be packaged.

For information on how to do this, please see the section on Web Application Publishing at:

http://octopusdeploy.com/documentation/packaging/octopack

3
  • can you update this answer? I don't see a "Web Application Publishing" section on the linked page. My specific issue is that the bin\Roslyn folder is being included in the nupkg. I tried using a publishing profile and running msbuild against the csproj instead, but that did not work: &$msbuildExe ..\trunk\WebUI\WebUI.csproj /p:DeployOnBuild=true /p:PublishProfile=local /p:RunOctoPack=true
    – b_levitt
    Jun 8, 2016 at 13:58
  • It's include files like EntityFramework.dll, which are dependencies on separate NuGet packages, NOT files that should be inlcuded in my nupkg file. How does one exclude them?
    – Triynko
    Aug 28, 2017 at 23:00
  • The question wasn't for advise. It was explicitly for excluding a folder from a nuget package. Oct 18, 2018 at 12:31

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