112

Has anyone seen this error and know how to fix it?

The "TransformXml" task could not be loaded from the assembly C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v11.0\Web\Microsoft.Web.Publishing.Tasks.dll.

Could not load file or assembly 'file:///C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v11.0\Web\Microsoft.Web.Publishing.Tasks.dll' or one of its dependencies. The system cannot find the file specified.

Confirm that the declaration is correct, that the assembly and all its dependencies are available, and that the task contains a public class that implements Microsoft.Build.Framework.ITask.

I read elsewhere that the problem is when you don't have SQL Server installed. But I do have SQL Express 2012 x64 installed with SP1. I am also running VS 2013 Professional.

I have ran this exact same solution in VS 2012 express with no problems.

2
  • 1
    This should be a nuget package. I don't like this hidden references inside of my project.
    – Jaider
    Jun 24, 2015 at 21:25
  • You should mark the answer from Benjamin Scheibe as the correct one. It seems to be the best solution
    – BHuelse
    Apr 3, 2018 at 8:03

11 Answers 11

181

The answers provided by Dai Bok and emalamisura work fine as long as you use Visual Studio 2012. For VS 2013 this fails as well. In order to make this work with all versions of Visual Studio you should:

  • Open the project file (.csproj) of the project failing to load
  • Search for <Import Project="$(MSBuildExtensionsPath)\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v10.0\Web\Microsoft.Web.Publishing.targets" />
  • Change it to <Import Project="$(MSBuildExtensionsPath)\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v$(VisualStudioVersion)\Web\Microsoft.Web.Publishing.targets" />
  • Reload the project

That will set the correct version of Visual Studio dynamically and properly.

11
  • 2
    I like your solution Benjamin, but the problem I was having was that the v11 folder was missing, possiblly because we have some people using vs2010 and have not upgraded to vs2012 yet
    – Dai Bok
    Nov 16, 2014 at 15:12
  • 8
    This got me started on the right path, but the change I made was to the <UsingTask TaskName="TransformXml" ...> node. My AssemblyFile was using the wrong version. Just needed to change the version here. Another option would be to use a version macro instead of explicitly setting the version.
    – Scott
    Feb 28, 2015 at 21:30
  • 6
    $(VisualStudioVersion) is returning an earlier version :(
    – Jaider
    Jun 24, 2015 at 21:22
  • 1
    This can be a parameter: stackoverflow.com/questions/20002532/…
    – Jaider
    Jun 24, 2015 at 21:38
  • 2
    Perfectly works while upgrading from VS2015 to VS2017. Now I can open the solution in both IDEs. Jul 18, 2017 at 16:42
30

To get mine to work, I just copied my v10.0 folder and renamed it to v11.0, and things seems to work well from then on. That's the quick fix for now.

As this is probably not the best solution, and although it works, I was going to try installing the Microsoft Windows SDK for Windows 7 and .NET Framework 4 Windows SDK for Windows 7 and .NET Framework 4, but it is taking to long to download.

2
  • 1
    I didn't see 'Web' folder in v10.0. So I copied it from v12.0 folder to v11.0 folder.
    – Sundeep
    May 19, 2015 at 14:23
  • 1
    worked with Visual Studio 2022. Copied v17.0 to v17.1 Mar 22, 2022 at 7:33
12

To fix the issue,

  1. Find the Visual studio Installer in your computer
  2. Click or tap to start the installer, and then select Modify.
  3. From the Individual Components screen, select Asp.net and web development tools and then select Modify/Install.

This solved the issue as it creates the dll's in the mentioned path.

5
  • 2
    I'm using VS2017 and performing this step does not create those files. I think maybe something else you selected (or in combination with ASP.net and web development tools) that added it. Not sure what though :(
    – Kris
    Jul 27, 2017 at 19:35
  • I've selected only that. Try selecting Web related components and install. Good Luck though. Jul 31, 2017 at 9:57
  • I just tried the whole of the web workflow and still don't have those files. I feel like this solution is so close. Wish it could be pin pointed since I have limited space on my HDD to install components Aug 28, 2017 at 13:45
  • 5
    For VS2017, I did Tools → Get Tools and Features... → Individual Components: Windows 10 SDK (10.0.14393.0) and ASP.NET and web development tools . This seems to have done the trick.
    – John Jones
    Sep 6, 2017 at 22:59
  • Tried this for VS2022 but none of the extra installs fixed it for me. I noticed mine was referencing a path with an odd value in it called \vCurrent, looked like this => C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio\2022\Community\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\vCurrent\Web\ I figured vCurrent might be v17.0 (current version) but it was not. I had to manually copy the DLLs (Microsoft.Web.Publishing.Tasks.dll & Microsoft.Web.XmlTransform.dll) into that directory & then it worked immediately.
    – raddevus
    Aug 17, 2022 at 18:24
10

I've been combating this problem on our build server for several days, so I figured I'd document the resolution I came to. First, my build server has the web publishing extensions installed. I can use the TransformXml task to my heart's content inside of a web application project.

To use it outside of a web application project, I tried to add the UsingTask element to my project and point it to the right place using ms build properties (as Benjamin demonstrated). However, they weren't there on my build server (those with easy access to the file system of their build server can probably skip this and just install the relevant package to Visual Studio). I even went so far as to hard code visual studio versions, but it always dropped that error on me.

I finally gave up, pulled the DLLs from my local PC:

C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v12.0\Web\Microsoft.Web.Publishing.Tasks.dll
C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v12.0\Web\Microsoft.Web.XmlTransform.dll

I uploaded them to source control and added that folder to my build's workspace (Edit Build Definition -> Source Settings -> Source Control Folder). From there, I don't even need to reference the folder -- here's what my UsingTask looks like:

  <UsingTask TaskName="TransformXml" AssemblyFile="Microsoft.Web.Publishing.Tasks.dll" />

Now I can use the TransformXml task to my heart's content from any project.

3
  • 9
    The MSBuild.Microsoft.VisualStudio.Web.targets package has the necessary targets to build without VS installed. For Example: <UsingTask TaskName="TransformXml" AssemblyFile="packages\MSBuild.Microsoft.VisualStudio.Web.targets.11.0.2.1\tools\VSToolsPath\Web\Microsoft.Web.Publishing.Tasks.dll" />. See this blog for more details
    – moonpatrol
    Mar 24, 2015 at 1:10
  • 1
    Hey @moonpatrol, you should make it an answer, because I prefer this way - installing package and then referring it - absolutely universal solution :-) I just tried it, and works perfectly. Thank you anyway! if you make it an answer, just ping me and I will vote.
    – Tengiz
    Jun 8, 2016 at 18:18
  • Thanks for showing the full path to the files it is looking for. That helped a ton. I just went to a system that had those files and copied them to the new one. But, check this out --- The path that it was looking for in mine had an odd value in it called vCurrent, looked like this => C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio\2022\Community\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\vCurrent\Web\ I figured vCurrent might be v17.0 (current version) but it was not. I had to copy those DLLs to the path shown above & then it instantly worked. Crazy
    – raddevus
    Aug 17, 2022 at 18:21
7

For VS2019

<UsingTask TaskName="TransformXml" AssemblyFile="$(MSBuildExtensionsPath32)\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v$(MSBuildToolsVersion

I replaced MSBuildToolsVersion with VisualStudioVersion.

1
  • By this document "learn.microsoft.com/visualstudio/msbuild/…" change MSBuildToolsVersion with VisualStudioVersion then I change that propety working well like this "$(MSBuildExtensionsPath32)\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v$(VisualStudioVersion)"
    – Kim Ki Won
    Jun 14, 2020 at 2:28
6

Because there are only v12.0, v14.0 and v15.0 in my VisualStudio folder, I edit my project file and change the reference path from v10.0 to v14.0. Then the project builds successfully.

Before:

<UsingTask TaskName="TransformXml" AssemblyFile="$(MSBuildExtensionsPath)\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v10.0\Web\Microsoft.Web.Publishing.Tasks.dll" />

After:

<UsingTask TaskName="TransformXml" AssemblyFile="$(MSBuildExtensionsPath)\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v14.0\Web\Microsoft.Web.Publishing.Tasks.dll" />
3

Solutions provided seem to work for using VS as an IDE, but if you use DotnetCore via CLI or on a unix based system this does not work.

I found that the following seem to work

  <PropertyGroup>
    <XmlTransformDllPath Condition="'$(XmlTransformDllPath)' == '' AND '$(MSBuildRuntimeType)' == 'core'">$(MSBuildSDKsPath)/Microsoft.NET.Sdk.Publish/tools/net5.0/Microsoft.NET.Sdk.Publish.Tasks.dll</XmlTransformDllPath>
    <XmlTransformDllPath Condition="'$(XmlTransformDllPath)' == '' AND '$(MSBuildRuntimeType)' != 'core'">$(MSBuildSDKsPath)/Microsoft.NET.Sdk.Publish/tools/net472/Microsoft.NET.Sdk.Publish.Tasks.dll</XmlTransformDllPath>
    <XmlTransformDllPath Condition="!Exists($(XmlTransformDllPath))">$(MSBuildExtensionsPath32)\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v$(VisualStudioVersion)\Web\Microsoft.Web.Publishing.Tasks.dll</XmlTransformDllPath>
  </PropertyGroup>
  <UsingTask TaskName="TransformXml" AssemblyFile="$(XmlTransformDllPath)" />

This solution takes into account netcore, full .net

For some reason MSBuildSDKsPath and MSBuildExtensionsPath32 are different on windows when using CLI vs VS2019

CLI: MSBuildSDKsPath = C:\Program Files\dotnet\sdk\5.0.103\Sdks MSBuildExtensionsPath32 = C:\Program Files\dotnet\sdk\5.0.103

Vs2019 MSBuildSDKsPath = C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2019\Enterprise\MSBuild\Sdks MSBuildExtensionsPath32 = C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2019\Enterprise\MSBuild

Which on my Mac returns /usr/local/share/dotnet/sdk/5.0.201

Only problem I see is with the tools/net5.0 part of the name which changes ever release

Also created https://github.com/dotnet/sdk/issues/16469 and answers this on The "TransformXml" task was not found (error MSB4036) on TeamCity build

2
  • This was the only way to get my azure CI pipeline (vmImage: windows-2019) to build my net48 project using the SDK project style and the task: DotNetCoreCLI@2 build step (and simultaneously support the standard developer experience in VS 2019) Thank you 1,000,000 x's
    – bkwdesign
    Sep 22, 2021 at 16:32
  • Because the part with tools/net5.0 changes with every release - which I noticed on my Azure Build Agents that stopped building my projects. I had to modify a bit, and use this instead: tools/$(WasmNativeWorkload)
    – bkwdesign
    Dec 28, 2022 at 13:55
2

The correct answer to this is to unload the project in question and then edit the csproj file, look for an entry where they are referencing the 10.0 path and change it to point to 11.0 instead.

2
  • + 1 for that. I caused this issue when I copied my work space folders from one dev machine to another. The second dev machine had v11 installed, not v10. Thus, the v10 folder was empty.
    – maplemale
    Apr 8, 2014 at 19:01
  • Is it safe to do this we upgrading to windows 10 and coming across exact same issue. Aug 27, 2021 at 13:44
1

You need two things to make it work:

1) Install Visual Studio Build Tools (You don't need the whole Visual Studio, only the VS Build Tools) with selected "Web development build tools" option on your build server https://www.visualstudio.com/pl/thank-you-downloading-visual-studio/?sku=BuildTools&rel=15

2) Ensure that path to Microsoft.Web.Publishing.Tasks.dll is correct

  <UsingTask TaskName="TransformXml" AssemblyFile="$(MSBuildExtensionsPath32)\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v$(MSBuildToolsVersion)\Web\Microsoft.Web.Publishing.Tasks.dll" />
0
1

For me it started working just by adding reference to the NuGet package MSBuild.Microsoft.VisualStudio.Web.targets v14.0.0.3

Even no need to add UsingTask element to the project file as it mentioned by the package author

https://github.com/pdonald/nuget-webtargets

Just install the NuGet package. The package automatically sets the $(VSToolsPath) property to use the targets file in the tools folder.

And then I was able to use TransformXml and other tasks, defined in the package, for instance to transform app.config

  <Target Name="app_config_AfterCompile" AfterTargets="AfterCompile" Condition="Exists('app.$(Configuration).config')">
    <!--Generate transformed app config in the intermediate directory-->
    <TransformXml Source="app.config" Destination="$(IntermediateOutputPath)$(TargetFileName).config" Transform="app.$(Configuration).config" />
    <!--Force build process to use the transformed configuration file from now on.-->
    <ItemGroup>
      <AppConfigWithTargetPath Remove="App.config" />
      <AppConfigWithTargetPath Include="$(IntermediateOutputPath)$(TargetFileName).config">
        <TargetPath>$(TargetFileName).config</TargetPath>
      </AppConfigWithTargetPath>
    </ItemGroup>
  </Target>
1
  • FYI - I tried this in VisualStudio 2022 & mine still wouldn't build & I got the same error about the transform xml.
    – raddevus
    Aug 17, 2022 at 14:10
1

Just in case someone is using an SDK-style csproj, you can achieve this without having to install Visual Studio on the build server.

  1. First you should install the SlowCheetah nuget package to your project. Once you install it, you'll see the following in your SDK-style project.

    <PackageReference Include="Microsoft.VisualStudio.SlowCheetah" Version="3.2.20">
            <PrivateAssets>all</PrivateAssets>
            <IncludeAssets>runtime; build; native; contentfiles; analyzers</IncludeAssets>
    </PackageReference>
    
  2. Then make sure you add the GeneratePathProperty="true" attribute (see below). This is very important for the next part because it'll help you grab the path of where the nuget package is restored on your machine. George Dangl explains it in his article here.

    <PackageReference Include="Microsoft.VisualStudio.SlowCheetah" Version="3.2.20" GeneratePathProperty="true">
            <PrivateAssets>all</PrivateAssets>
            <IncludeAssets>runtime; build; native; contentfiles; analyzers</IncludeAssets>
    </PackageReference>
    
  3. Import the SlowCheetah targets into your project:

    <Import Project="$(PkgMicrosoft_VisualStudio_SlowCheetah)\build\Microsoft.VisualStudio.SlowCheetah.targets" />
    
  4. You can now use an target command (in this case after publish) to apply some custom transformations. If you need to, you can always hard-code the file names below instead of using the variables in the below example.

    <Target Name="AfterPublishs" AfterTargets="Publish">
         <TransformTask Source="Web.config" Transform="Web.$(Configuration).MyCustomTransformFile.config" Destination="$(PublishDir)\Web.config" />
    </Target>
    

If you haven't used SlowCheetah before, I recommend checking it out. They have a Visual Studio extension that will make it easier for you to preview transform files.

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