204

The last windows update has broken our whole build chain and I am a little at a loss at what causes it.

I have a legacy project that is a VS 2017 solution with a significant number of projects (winform, couple web based, some Webapi only).

Locally things work perfectly. I can just build them.

On the server, the proejct has started to fail, and the error is:

C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2017\BuildTools\MSBuild\Microsoft\NuGet\15.0\Microsoft.NuGet.targets(186,5): Error : Your project file doesn't list 'win' as a "RuntimeIdentifier". You should add 'win' to the "RuntimeIdentifiers" property in your project file and then re-run NuGet restore.

C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2017\BuildTools\MSBuild\Microsoft\NuGet\15.0\Microsoft.NuGet.targets(186,5): Error : Your project file doesn't list 'win' as a "RuntimeIdentifier". You should add 'win' to the "RuntimeIdentifiers" property in your project file and then re-run NuGet restore.

C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2017\BuildTools\MSBuild\Microsoft\NuGet\15.0\Microsoft.NuGet.targets(186,5): Error : Your project file doesn't list 'win' as a "RuntimeIdentifier". You should add 'win' to the "RuntimeIdentifiers" property in your project file and then re-run NuGet restore.

Process 'msbuild.exe' exited with code '1'.

I have added

<RuntimeIdentifiers>win</RuntimeIdentifiers>

To a number of projects. No change. I am at a loss, because the error message does not even tell me which project.

5
  • Identical issue here, same legacy project, same VS version.
    – JohnKoz
    Sep 5, 2018 at 21:59
  • TomTom - did you solve it? I have the same problem now.
    – Uri Y
    Oct 4, 2018 at 15:07
  • Just disappeared as it seems. Remember we are now at 15.8.6...
    – TomTom
    Oct 4, 2018 at 15:09
  • This is not limited to VS2017, happens with VS2022 also. Sep 21 at 14:05
  • Yea. You may want to realize when I wrote that post ;) But you are right - that is an ongoing issue to some degree.
    – TomTom
    Sep 21 at 14:53

24 Answers 24

360

At some point before attempting to build, you need to delete the obj folder. More than one person showed this to solve the problem.

https://developercommunity.visualstudio.com/content/problem/312180/projects-fail-to-build-in-1580-due-to-errors-from.html

11
  • 4
    Nope. Not it. I nuke the whole folder tree - even has to make a full git get on every build. No build.
    – TomTom
    Sep 7, 2018 at 2:03
  • 50
    Deleting the obj folder in each of my projects in the solution removed this error for me. Sep 9, 2018 at 13:13
  • 7
    I also have the same error with VS 15.9.9. The problem appear only with devenv command line. Not through the VS GUI.
    – David
    Mar 15, 2019 at 12:46
  • 4
    fur future reference, this can happen due to moving to PackageReference and back, leaving residues. open issue: github.com/dotnet/project-system/issues/3164 Apr 7, 2019 at 8:02
  • 3
    I ran into this issue when I upgraded a .NET framework style project to the new SDK style project format, but I had to do work on a different branch that didn't have the project updated. I thought "clean" was supposed to delete stuff in bin and obj, but manually deleting the obj folder is what ultimately fixed things.
    – TJR
    May 3, 2022 at 15:19
78

Although @Señor CMasMas's answer has helped me in the past, I'm now finding (since installing the .NET Core SDK v2.2 - I don't know if that's related though) that I also need to close and reopen Visual Studio. So for me the recipe is:

  • Clean solution
  • Delete obj folders
  • Delete the .vs folder (optional, if you get red lines but it builds OK)
  • Close and reopen Visual Studio
  • Then build
4
  • 7
    I've converted project to the new SDK format, built it and rolled back my changes. Then I've got this project file doesn't list 'win' as a "RuntimeIdentifier" error for csproj legacy format. I've removed all bin and obj files that had been created while playing with new project format and it started to compile again.
    – oleksa
    Jun 4, 2019 at 9:55
  • Thanks, this should be the accepted answer for any project that is about to be recompiled but not changed in any way. In a git repo the use of git-clean would be an option to remove the intermediate build results.
    – tobster
    Apr 12, 2022 at 6:58
  • This is what worked for me. I had tried deleting the obj folder of the project that wasn't building, then tried cleaning the solution and deleting both the bin and obj folders of that project. It was only when I followed these instructions, including closing and reopening VS, that I was able to build successfully. This was in Visual Studio 2022, build 17.3.5, by the way.
    – Simon Elms
    Oct 28, 2022 at 3:46
  • After attempting to "upgrade" a .NET Framework 4.8 project to the new SDK style, and finding out the hard way that it breaks things like ClickOnce, etc from .NET Framework days, I manually rolled back to the original MSBuild XML format. That's when I started getting build errors, saying "Your project file doesn't list 'win' as a "Runtimeidentifier"". By performing the actions above, nuking the .vs/obj/bin folders, and closing/reopening all VS instances, it started building again. Thank you! Jun 30 at 17:09
59

Add this: <RuntimeIdentifier>win</RuntimeIdentifier> to your project file, for example after element TargetFrameworkVersion. Make sure the element name is singular. RuntimeIdentifiers on the other hand is used in the new csproj format

6
  • 8
    This worked for me. I'm mixing .Net Standard and .Net Framework projects. This was required for all the .Net Framework .csproj files to for the solution to build from command line. May 16, 2019 at 1:36
  • 4
    This worked for me in a case where I had migrated the project to use PackageReference style nuget.
    – RosieC
    Oct 9, 2019 at 14:04
  • 5
    Why does it then build in visual studio and from msbuild in command line.. but breaks in azure?
    – Piotr Kula
    Mar 30, 2020 at 22:17
  • 6
    I added the plural version <RuntimeIdentifiers>win-x64;win-x86</RuntimeIdentifiers> to a .NET project file, and it worked.
    – Rye bread
    Dec 2, 2020 at 12:17
  • 2
    I added the singular as above for a mixture of .net standard and .net 6 assemblies with a .net framework on the windows latest agent in Azure Devops. Fixed for me. Many thanks. Nov 20, 2022 at 16:08
27

Or you just can run in the root directory of your project the script in PowerShell that you should run as administrator.

Get-ChildItem .\ -include bin,obj -Recurse | foreach { remove-item $_.fullname -Force -Recurse }

this script will delete all obj and bin folders

3
  • Simple and effective. I just needed to remove bin and obj.... Thanks very much Oct 25, 2019 at 14:01
  • 5
    Nice. Alternatively, rm *\obj -Recurse -Force also works Dec 17, 2019 at 21:25
  • Careful that this solution deletes all bin and obj folders. If you have a node_modules folder inside your tree, note than some modules (ie @babel, @eslint and probably many others) contain bin folders as well. Deleting all bin might fix your dotnet build but will then break your npm build.
    – w5l
    Aug 24 at 9:14
19

I have come across same error in Vs 2019 (16.8.6), following steps resolved my problem.

  1. Close visual studio (other visual studio instances may remain)
  2. Delete all bin and obj folders in all projects in the solution
  3. Reopen solution and Build

Note that if bin folders exist, deleting only obj folders doesn't work, you need to delete bin folders too.

1
  • Unloading the failing project before deleting it's \bin & \obj worked for me. May 2 at 21:08
9

Had this problem in projects using packageReference when manually restoring packages by running

NuGet.exe restore my.sln

as part of a TeamCity build (so might be related nf313743's answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/60951212/128384) and then building projects using msbuild. This would result in the following error when msbuild begins dealing with the PackageReference:

[ResolveNuGetPackageAssets] C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2017\Community\MSBuild\Microsoft\NuGet\15.0\Microsoft.NuGet.targets(186, 5):
Your project file doesn't list 'win-x86' as a "RuntimeIdentifier". You should add 'win-x86' to the "RuntimeIdentifiers" property in your project file and then re-run NuGet restore.

Deleting obj directories etc doesn't work here because they get added by the restore step; adding a RuntimeIdentifier might, but building the exact same on a VS2017 commandline works fine so clearly the difference is in how TeamCity sets up the environment.

The culprit could be found in the output of the first call:

NuGet.exe restore my.sln -NonInteractive
MSBuild auto-detection: using msbuild version '16.10.2.30804'
from 'C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2019\Community\MSBuild\Current\bin'.

it uses msbuild from the VS2019 installation whereas the project is being built by VS2017, so somewhere in mixing those there is an incompatibility which is not unexpected. Anyway, the key is likely that TeamCity doesn't setup a complete environment like the VS2017 commandline does and the NuGet documentation says

By default the MSBuild in your path is picked,
otherwise it defaults to the highest installed version of MSBuild.

so that's why it uses the VS2019 one. Solution is to manually pass -MsBuildPath to NuGet and set it to what corresponds to the selected buildtools in teamCity, in this case:

NuGet.exe -msBuildPath "%MSBuildTools15.0_x86_Path%" restore my.sln

(and it turns out teamCity itself is also plagued by this in its own NuGet step: How to set the MSBuild verision for TeamCity NuGet Installer?)

1
  • 2
    @stjin: You are my hero! In my multi-targeting solution containing net48/net5.0-windows combined projects as well as net48 only projects - one of them a not updateable non-SDK project - this was the only thing that worked for my Azure pipeline: To use NUGET RESTORE instead of DOTNET RESTORE and specify the -MSBuildPath (which must point to the folder where MSBuild.exe resides, not to the exe itself).
    – Christoph
    Aug 3, 2022 at 12:08
6

I had a similar problem. My error was

error : Your project file doesn't list 'win10' as a "RuntimeIdentifier". You should add 'win10' to the "RuntimeIdentifiers" property in your project file and then re-run NuGet restore.

Well, it turned out I just had to change by build target from "Any CPU" to something else (x64 for example)...

5

I have a similar case. I try to build a solution via msbuild without installing Visual Studio 2017, just install the latest version of vs 2017 build tools. Here are my steps:

  1. dotnet restore a.sln (There are some .Net Standard Library project in this solution, the others are .NET 4.7.2 projects).
  2. call msbuild.exe to build this solution.
  3. I got the error of "missing RuntimeIdentifier".

Your project file doesn't list 'win' as a "RuntimeIdentifier". You should add 'win' to the "RuntimeIdentifiers" property in your project file and then re-run NuGet restore.

It seems an issue in the old version of Nuget. Please refer here. Finally, I resolved it via restore packages with the latest Nuget (v5.0.2). the steps:

  1. Delete obj and bin folders
  2. nuget.exe restore a.sln
  3. call msbuild.exe
1
  • 2
    Upgrading nuget.exe from v4.9.4.5839 to v5.4.0.6315 solved this problem for me.
    – blaz
    Apr 9, 2020 at 12:14
5

you got to figure out which projects in your solution trigger this error. you can find this if you look at the error panel. go to that projects locations and delete both the bin and the obj folders. then rebuild. should be alright

3

I had this same issue toggling across vstools build chains (VS2017/VS2019) - here is what fixed it for me - brute force clean via rimraf

Your project file doesn't list 'win' as a "RuntimeIdentifier". You should add 'win' to the "RuntimeIdentifiers" proper ty in your project file and then re-run NuGet restore

Remove Intermediary Build Output Artifacts

rimraf *\obj\**

1

The RuntimeIdentifier should look something more like what's described here: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/core/rid-catalog.

Given this appears to build just find locally, I'd diff the .csproj on your local machine against the one on your build server. Something tells me, they are not identical.

FWIW, Line 186 in the noted Microsoft.NuGet.targets file, is running the ResolveNuGetPackageAssets task, and you can see the RuntimeIdentifier argument being passed as the NuGetRuntimeIdentifier property. You could probably backtrace that in your working build's diagnostic log to see how it's being assigned.

But given this works on one box, and not on another, I'd just dbl check your project files and verify that the RuntimeIdentifier tag identical on both systems.

Sincerely,

1

I was receiving the same error as the original poster, with Msbuild v15.9.21

Your project file doesn't list 'win' as a "RuntimeIdentifier". You should add 'win' to the "RuntimeIdentifiers" property in your project file and then re-run NuGet restore

My projects are .net Framework v4.6.2. The projects build fine locally using VS 2017, but failed when building on TeamCity Enterprise 10.0.5. I had recently converted my projects from .package to PackageReference - this causing the build to fail.

My solution was to add a new build step to explictly restore the solution's nuget packages before building the solution. It seems that before converting the projects to PackageReference this was being done on the build step implicitly.

1

To projects mult-target fmk Add this to your project file, for example:

<PropertyGroup>
  <RuntimeIdentifier>ubuntu.16.04-x64</RuntimeIdentifier>
</PropertyGroup>

or

<PropertyGroup>
  <RuntimeIdentifier>win</RuntimeIdentifier>
</PropertyGroup>
1

So I was seeing the same error message as this on our on premises DevOps build server, but it built fine locally in Visual Studio as well as via the msbuild on the command line.

I checked and I DID have the <RuntimeIdentifiers> defined in my project file and clearing out the obj and bin folders on the server did NOT fix it for me.

Our issue was we had the < RunTimeIdentifiers> tag showing up MULTIPLE times in the build section,(probably from a bad merge at some point in the past). After removing the duplicate tags, DevOps successfully built the project.

I was googling for hours and never stumbled on this being the cause of the issue for anyone else. Hopefully this saves someone else some time in the future if they have the same problem.

4
  • which tag? RuntimeIdentifier?
    – CervEd
    Aug 2, 2022 at 9:33
  • 1
    Yes we had multiple RuntimeIdentifier tags with the same values.
    – Newey
    Aug 2, 2022 at 17:15
  • 1
    Apologies I did originally did not add an extra space to the Tags in my respons above so markdown was trying to interpret them and it hid them so you couldn't see them in my original post
    – Newey
    Aug 2, 2022 at 17:48
  • You may surround the tag with backticks ` which will appropriately format as well as add emphasis
    – CervEd
    Aug 3, 2022 at 8:15
0

For me, it was as simple as compiling a Windows IoT App with x86 platform instead of ARM.

0
0

In my case, this was happening on an Azure build.

I was able to resolve it by forcing the build to use Visual Studio 2019 tools.

I modified our build.cake file so that the MSBuild steps included the UseToolVersion for VS 2019 like this:

     MSBuild(_solutionFile, settings => settings.SetConfiguration(_configuration)
         .UseToolVersion(MSBuildToolVersion.VS2019));
0

The only thing that worked for me was to delete ALL project files and download them again from the version control. Then the problem disappeared.

0

If you are targeting Azure Service Fabric or other 64-bit environment, check that you have a consistent <PlatformTarget>x64</PlatformTarget> in all configurations defined in the CSPROJ file. In my case it built just fine locally but failed on the CI server because one of the many configurations had <PlatformTarget>AnyCPU</PlatformTarget>.

0

I always get this error in the Azure pipeline. So far I have noticed the following fixed for me in various occasions: 1. do not commit the .suo file - if so, delete and recommit 2. do not commit the bin or obj folders - if so, delete and recommit 3. if there is a new project added, set the project dependency on the solution properties - save and commit the .sln file

0

I had same issue with one of the unit test project failing to compile after I upgraded to VS to 15.9.27 and the solution to delete the obj folder worked for me

0

A simple nuget restore before calling MSBuild worked for me. I have projects targeting .NET Framework 4.7.2 (not SDK Style, legacy style) which I migrated from packages.config syntax.

0

I experienced this issue with a MSBUILD project that I've added into a solution of VS2015 and VS2019, that project was compiled with VS2010. I just excluded it from solution and compiled it with VS2010, including the .DLL file into other projects that work with VS2015 and VS2019.

0

I'm using VS 2019 (16.11.17). I was working in 2022 on a different branch.

I tried all of these solutions and none worked, until I deleted the solution folder and cloned fresh.

0

For me, the secret was buried in a github issue: I had two .csproj files in the same directory, which is apparently discouraged. Moving one out to a different folder resolved the issue.

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