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• I have used the command

xamarin-component.exe package C:\cmp\AndroidComponent\component 

for creating Xamarin component.While building the Sample android project, it is showing the below error. (I have used the command xamarin-component.exe package C:\cmp\AndroidComponent\component -verbose to display the error message in detail).

Error message:

C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\Xamarin\Android\Xamarin.Android.Bindings.targets(155,2): error MSB3644: The reference assemblies for framework "MonoAndroid,Version=v1.0" were not found. To resolve this, install the SDK or Targeting Pack for this framework version or retarget your application to a version of the framework for which you have the SDK or Targeting Pack installed. Note that assemblies will be resolved from the Global Assembly Cache (GAC) and will be used in place of reference assemblies. Therefore your assembly may not be correctly targeted for the framework you intend. [C:\cmp\AndroidComponent\component\samples\App17\VidyoClientAndroid\VidyoClientAndroid.csproj]

Note:

I am able to create a Xamarin component for iOS source code successfully. • While creating the Xamarin component for Android source code, internally msbuild.exe is getting called from 64 bit folder(C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\14.0\bin**amd64**\msbuild.exe "/p:Configuration=Release" "C:\cmp\AndroidComponent\component\samples\App17\App17.sln"...). • Build is successful when msbuild.exe is called from path: “C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\14.0\Bin\msbuild.exe”(32 bit) explicitly while building the android project explicity.

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1 Answer 1

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We ran into the same issue; you were close to the right answer, and the forums had the correct one.

First lets look at the portion of code that is erroring (Xamarin.Android.Common.targets; in the newer versions of Xamarin this code is much further down):

<Target Name="_GetReferenceAssemblyPaths">
<GetReferenceAssemblyPaths
        TargetFrameworkMoniker="$(TargetFrameworkIdentifier),Version=v1.0"
        RootPath="$(TargetFrameworkRootPath)">
    <Output TaskParameter="ReferenceAssemblyPaths" PropertyName="_XATargetFrameworkDirectories" />
</GetReferenceAssemblyPaths>

The most important part here is the

$(TargetFrameworkRootPath)

When NuGet is ran via the command line we see that it is using the 64bit MSBuild Executable:

MSBuild auto-detection: using msbuild version '14.0' from 'C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\14.0\bin\amd64'.

(You correctly identified this yourself above) but just to be clear for anyone following along.

When you use the 64bit version of MSBuild $(TargetFrameworkRootPath) gets defined as C:\Program Files\Reference Assemblies\Microsoft\Framework However Xamarin does not install any of the Framework Utilities to that directory; instead everything lives in the x86 version here C:\Program Files (x86)\Reference Assemblies\Microsoft\Framework

When you read online a ton of people get this problem solved by installing Visual Studio 2017; but that is a red-herring it only works because it causes NuGet to use MSBuild 15 which ships with Visual Studio 2017 which apparently is not affected by this bug.

There are a few ways to fix this issue:

  1. Tell NuGet to use the x86 MSBuild when you Restore using the optional -MSBuildPath argument as described here How Can I Tell NuGet What MSBuild Executable to Use?
  2. Upgrade to Visual Studio 2017 to get MSBuild 15
  3. Define $(TargetFrameworkRootPath) to be C:\Program Files (x86)\Reference Assemblies\Microsoft\Framework; this can be done however you please, the biggest hammer is to set it as an environment variable in the environment prior to execution. Note this will probably cause a bunch of unintended side-affects if you're not careful. <- DON'T DO THIS, Even as suggested in the forms.

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