18

As instructed by the Rider IDE, I installed the .NET Core framework from Microsoft. I know that the installation was successful since I am able to run the dotnet command from my terminal. However, after restarting Rider, I still get the following message:

Cannot detect .NET Core. Please install .NET Core and restart Rider.

Am I doing anything wrong?

9 Answers 9

26

I managed to fix the issue setting

/opt/dotnet/dotnet

in

Settings | Build,Execution,Deployment |
  Toolset and Build | .NET Core CLI executable path

enter image description here

Previously, I was using /usr/bin/dotnet, but it doesn't work anymore. Also, auto detect seems to be broken.

Actually, /usr/bin/dotnet, the path returned by which dotnet, is just a shell file defering to /opt/dotnet/dotnet, as its content is:

#!/bin/sh

export DOTNET_ROOT=/opt/dotnet
exec /opt/dotnet/dotnet $@

# vim: ts=2 sw=2 et:
0
8

I was just experiencing this issue due to a botched install of Xamarin Android on Arch Linux and was able to resolve it by doing the following:

First execute dotnet --info to get the path of .NET Core SDKs installed:

.NET Core SDK (reflecting any global.json): Version: 2.1.500
Commit: b68b931422

Runtime Environment: OS Name: arch OS Version: OS Platform:
Linux RID: arch-x64 Base Path: /opt/dotnet/sdk/2.1.500/

Host (useful for support): Version: 2.1.6 Commit: 3f4f8eebd8

.NET Core SDKs installed:
2.1.500 [/opt/dotnet/sdk]

.NET Core runtimes installed: Microsoft.NETCore.App 2.1.6
[/opt/dotnet/shared/Microsoft.NETCore.App]

To install additional .NET Core runtimes or SDKs:
https://aka.ms/dotnet-download

Up one directory at /opt/dotnet/ there should be an executable named "dotnet." The absolute path to this file (/opt/dotnet/dotnet) should be set as the .NET Core CLI executable path value under FileSettingsBuild, Execution, DeploymentToolset and Build settings in Rider.

Just in case, here are my other toolset configuration settings:

Mono executable path: /usr/bin/mono

Use MSBuild version: Auto detected (15,0), /usr/lib/mono/msbuild/bin/MSBuild.dll

I also have the following values added to my PATH in .bashrc due to an error I received regarding Razor not being found:

export MSBuildSDKsPath=/opt/dotnet/sdk/$(dotnet --version)/Sdks

export PATH=${PATH}:${MSBuildSDKsPath}

2

None of these worked for me. I am on PopOS and found a solution here shown in the below screenshot. I think in general it is still a bad idea to install anything from Jetbrains through the Snap store. I've had issues with Intellij and Pycharm as well dating back to ~2014 that were immediately resolved by not using the Snap store.

enter image description here

1
  • 1
    Installed using flatpak. Similar issue. Then used the JetBrains Toolbox and it worked.
    – SandRock
    Mar 24 at 18:08
2

Solution adapted from this answer on YouTrack.

Add the DOTNET_ROOT environment variable in the file launchsettings.json. In my case, it was: "DOTNET_ROOT": "/usr/share/dotnet"

1

You can set up the path to .NET CLI in Rider settings: menu File* → SettingsBuild, Execution, DeploymentToolset and Build. But usually Rider should auto detect it.

Please check what you have dotnet in your PATH. Pay attention; you should restart Rider after installing the .NET Core SDK.

3
  • 1
    @Philippe I'm running into this same problem on Arch after trying to get Xamarin.Android working. Did you find a solution to this problem?
    – masterwok
    Nov 22, 2018 at 20:29
  • Also on Arch. I downgraded to the previous version of dotnet (2.1.5). They show up now
    – Philippe
    Nov 23, 2018 at 7:19
  • 1
    @masterwok on Arch, with DotNet (2.1.500) and Rider (2018.2.3) I managed to fix the issue specifying /opt/dotnet/dotnet in Settings/Build,Execution,Deployment/Toolset and Build/.NET Core CLI executable path Nov 24, 2018 at 6:28
1

My solution was run command dotnet new console on root of project. Then, the templates are showed.

0

I made the rather silly mistake of installing .NET Core runtime but forgetting about .NET Core SDK (so the dotnet tool still worked). Once I actually installed the SDK, Rider instantly detected it (.NET 3.1 and Rider 2019.3).

The suggestion to use dotnet --info by masterwok quickly highlights this issue though.

0

Neither reinstallation nor path opt/lib64/dotnet works for me.

I have to use the path /var/run/host/usr/lib64/dotnet for .NET cli executable path SDK instead.

Source: https://github.com/flathub/com.jetbrains.Rider/issues/36#issuecomment-1154737584

0

In my case despite installing dotnet-sdk-7.0 and dotnet --version command returning correct version, I've been seeing no SDK in dotnet --info.

The problem was that I had dotnet packages installed from different sources. There are a few sources you can download dotnet package: official Ubuntu feed and Microsoft feed. I wanted to use Microsoft feed, as it provided newer versions of dotnet for my distro version, but actually used both.

Here is how you can list all your dotnet packages:

sudo apt list --installed | grep dotnet

Here is how you can check source of your packages:

sudo apt policy dotnet-sdk-7.0

How to fix it

You just need to follow this docs. You need to get rid of official Ubuntu packages and install all of them from one source.

So: Remove all dotnet packages:

sudo apt remove 'dotnet*' 'aspnet*' 'netstandard*'

Create files for apt preferences:

touch /etc/apt/preferences

Inside this file, paste this text. It will configure APT to ignore packages with those names in specific package source:

Package: dotnet* aspnet* netstandard*
Pin: origin "<your-package-source>"
Pin-Priority: -10

So if you configure it like this:

Package: dotnet* aspnet* netstandard*
Pin: origin "archive.ubuntu.com"
Pin-Priority: -10

It will ignore packages from archive.ubuntu.com. So when you install dotnet-sdk-7.0 again, it will omit archive.ubuntu.com and install it from Microsoft source.

You may have different package sources, depending on distro, you can check it like this:

sudo cat /etc/apt/sources.list.d/official-package-repositories.list

Your Answer

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

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