268

On a successful build, I wish to copy the contents of the output directory to a different location under the same "base" folder. This parent folder is a relative part and can vary based on Source Control settings.

I have listed a few of the Macro values available to me ...

$(SolutionDir) = D:\GlobalDir\Version\AppName\Solution1\build

$(ProjectDir) = D:\GlobalDir\Version\AppName\Solution1\Version\ProjectA\

I want to copy the Output Dir contents to the following folder :

D:\GlobalDir\Version\AppName\Solution2\Project\Dependency

The base location "D:\GlobalDir\Version\AppName" needs to be fetched from one of the above macros. However, none of the macro values list only the parent location.

How do I extract only the base location for the post build copy command ?

7 Answers 7

347

Here is what you want to put in the project's Post-build event command line:

copy /Y "$(TargetDir)$(ProjectName).dll" "$(SolutionDir)lib\$(ProjectName).dll"

EDIT: Or if your target name is different than the Project Name.

copy /Y "$(TargetDir)$(TargetName).dll" "$(SolutionDir)lib\$(TargetName).dll"
8
  • 3
    It wasn't working for me because I forgot the /Y. Thanks for showing the whole command.
    – Mark
    Nov 13, 2012 at 13:06
  • 13
    One can use xcopy with wildcards and the appropriate switches to achieve a similar result, whilst maintaining the source folder's (tree) structure, such as: xcopy /i /e /s /y /f "<source>\MyFolder\*" "<destination>\MyFolder"
    – Dr1Ku
    Feb 21, 2013 at 12:55
  • 3
    +1 for quotes (if you path has spaces) and /Y to force in case of overwrite.
    – A. Murray
    Mar 1, 2013 at 15:03
  • 5
    I would suggest to use $(TargetName) instead of $(ProjectName) in the source-part. Apr 1, 2013 at 15:25
  • 3
    update to my prev. comment: copy /Y "$(TargetPath)" "$(SolutionDir)somewhere\" , without the extra backslash, since $(SolutionDir) includes a trailing backslash (at least in VS2012)
    – icy
    Sep 12, 2014 at 14:19
214

If none of the TargetDir or other macros point to the right place, use the ".." directory to go backwards up the folder hierarchy.

ie. Use $(SolutionDir)\..\.. to get your base directory.


For list of all macros, see here:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/c02as0cs.aspx

0
43

You could try:

$(SolutionDir)..\..\
1
  • 9
    Please keep in mind that the variable $(SolutionDir) already has the back slash. Source: "The directory of the solution (defined with drive and path); includes the trailing backslash '\'." msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/42x5kfw4.aspx
    – Snicker
    Dec 13, 2016 at 18:40
16

I think this is related, but I had a problem when building directly using msbuild command line (from a batch file) vs building from within VS.

Using something like the following:

<PostBuildEvent>
  MOVE /Y "$(TargetDir)something.file1" "$(ProjectDir)something.file1"
  start XCOPY /Y /R "$(SolutionDir)SomeConsoleApp\bin\$(ConfigurationName)\*" "$(ProjectDir)App_Data\Consoles\SomeConsoleApp\"
</PostBuildEvent>

(note: start XCOPY rather than XCOPY used to get around a permissions issue which prevented copying)

The macro $(SolutionDir) evaluated to ..\ when executing msbuild from a batchfile, which resulted in the XCOPY command failing. It otherwise worked fine when built from within Visual Studio. Confirmed using /verbosity:diagnostic to see the evaluated output.

Using the macro $(ProjectDir)..\ instead, which amounts to the same thing, worked fine and retained the full path in both build scenarios.

2
  • 1
    cross-linking to the same hack in case I forgot to give credit...
    – drzaus
    Apr 17, 2015 at 17:20
  • Start worked for me (for xcopy at a shared folder).
    – AgentFire
    Jun 14, 2017 at 16:12
4

Would it not make sense to use msbuild directly? If you are doing this with every build, then you can add a msbuild task at the end? If you would just like to see if you can’t find another macro value that is not showed on the Visual Studio IDE, you could switch on the msbuild options to diagnostic and that will show you all of the variables that you could use, as well as their current value.

To switch this on in visual studio, go to Tools/Options then scroll down the tree view to the section called Projects and Solutions, expand that and click on Build and Run, at the right their is a drop down that specify the build output verbosity, setting that to diagnostic, will show you what other macro values you could use.

Because I don’t quite know to what level you would like to go, and how complex you want your build to be, this might give you some idea. I have recently been doing build scripts, that even execute SQL code as part of the build. If you would like some more help or even some sample build scripts, let me know, but if it is just a small process you want to run at the end of the build, the perhaps going the full msbuild script is a bit of over kill.

Hope it helps Rihan

2
  • thx Rihan, but apparently VS 2003 doesn't seem to support this ! I am of course quite content with the post build event ;-)
    – Preets
    May 7, 2009 at 15:21
  • 1
    I did not realize it was vs2003, and hence the using msbuild as a possible solution, if I recall vs2003 was pre the msbuild era? Thanks for the response. Best of luck with VS 2003, I did not look back after moving over to VS2005
    – Rihan Meij
    May 7, 2009 at 18:06
0

I solved my problem by reinstall VS and then download .Net Core (3.x and 2.x) sdk packages

0

Here is my post build script

  1. Creates the custom path for my own. Including library and version.
  2. Copies the .dll (target file)
  3. Copies the *.md files.

script:

md c:\_References\$(ProjectName)\$(AssemblyVersion)
xcopy $(ProjectDir)$(OutDir)$(TargetFileName) c:\_References\$(ProjectName)\$(AssemblyVersion) /y
xcopy $(ProjectDir)*.md c:\_References\$(ProjectName)\$(AssemblyVersion) /y

Your Answer

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

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