Cannot build .net core 1.1 with msbuild tools - msbuild

I have a .net core class library I am attempting to build into a nugget package. however, on my build server (running team city), I am getting the following error:
C:\TeamCity\buildAgent\work\3c6531587491c25e\MySolution\MyProject.csproj
error MSB4019: The imported project "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft
Visual
Studio\2017\BuildTools\MSBuild\Sdks\Microsoft.NET.Sdk\Sdk\Sdk.props"
was not found. Confirm that the path in the declaration is
correct, and that the file exists on disk.
When I look in this directory, I ma missing the "Microsoft.NET.Sdk" folder from my build server. where do I get these tools without having to install visual studio?
Thanks!

See the tracking issue on GitHub: https://github.com/Microsoft/msbuild/issues/1697
If you don't want to touch your build tools installation (by copying SDK files), you can also set the MSBuildSDKsPath environment variable to the location of the SDKs carried in the .net CLI (usually C:\Program Files\dotnet\sdk\1.0.0\Sdks\)

Related

MSBuild error building ASP.Net Core 1.0 project - Imported project was not found

Trying to build a ASP.Net Core 1.0 project (.xproj) on a Build machine. Project built in VS2015. .Net Core is installed on the Build machine. I get this build error
The imported project "C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v14.0\DotNet\Microsoft.DotNet.Props" was not found. Confirmed that path in the declaration is correct, and file exists on disk.
Tried the suggestion from this stackoverflow questionbut doesn't help.
I can confirm that the path and file do exist on the build server.
Also tried passing MS Build Argument /p:VisualStudioVersion=14.
Any leads highly appreciated.

Appveyor CI fails to build a .net core 2.1 solution with a database project

Our .net core 2.1 solution compiles fine on our local development machines with .net core sdk 2.1.301. Appveyor used to compile the solution in its CI pipeline when there was no database projects defined. Once such a project added, Appveyor started failing in building the solution with the error message below. Any clues how to address this issue?
C:\projects\comingsoon\ComsingSoonDatabase\ComsingSoonDatabase.sqlproj(57,3):
error MSB4019: The imported project "C:\Program
Files\dotnet\sdk\2.1.300\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v11.0\SSDT\Microsoft.Data.Tools.Schema.SqlTasks.targets"
was not found. Confirm that the path in the declaration is
correct, and that the file exists on disk.
The database project can only be built using the full framework MSBuild tools included in visual studio.
Depending on how you set up appveyor, you need to change your definition to use msbuild.exe instead of dotnet commands.

Microsoft.Windows.UI.Xaml.CSharp.targets missing on CI server

Problem
I just committed the addition of a UWP application to source control. However, my CI server (Jenkins) didn't seem to like that:
error MSB4019: The imported project "C:\Program Files
(x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft\WindowsXaml\v14.0\Microsoft.Windows.UI.Xaml.CSharp.targets"
was not found. Confirm that the path in the declaration is
correct, and that the file exists on disk.
This is stemming from the following UWP project file import:
<Import Project="$(MSBuildExtensionsPath)\Microsoft\WindowsXaml\v$(VisualStudioVersion)\Microsoft.Windows.UI.Xaml.CSharp.targets" />
On my local machine, I can see this file located at:
C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2017\Professional\MSBuild\Microsoft\WindowsXaml\v15.0\Microsoft.Windows.UI.Xaml.CSharp.Targets
Obviously, this is due to my local installation of Visual Studio 2017. However, the CI server does not have Visual Studio installed. I imagine this is why MSBuildExtensionsPath is resolving to the path mentioned in the error instead.
Dependencies
The following items are already installed on the CI server:
Visual Studio Build Tools 2017 (download)
Windows 10 SDK 10.0.15063.468 (download)
Xamarin.VisualStudio 4.5.0.476 (download)
.NET Framework 4.5.1-4.7 SDKs
I assumed these would include the necessary dependencies, but I cannot find Microsoft.Windows.UI.Xaml.CSharp.targets anywhere.
Workaround
Copying the directory on my local machine
C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2017\Professional\MSBuild\Microsoft\WindowsXaml\v15.0
to the CI server at
C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft\WindowsXaml\v14.0
seems to resolve the error, but it feels very hacky.
Question
Is there a way to resolve this without installing Visual Studio 2017 on the CI server or copying/renaming files manually?
UPDATE 2018-01-12:
This is still an issue with the latest version of VSBT. The only thing to report is the error changed from v14 to v15. After copying the same directory over to v15, the error is gone again. However, another seemingly unrelated error shows up:
C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual
Studio\2017\BuildTools\MSBuild\15.0\Bin\Microsoft.Common.CurrentVersion.targets(1124,5):
error MSB3644: The reference assemblies for framework
".NETCore,Version=v5.0" 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.
UPDATE 2018-01-15
.NETCore,Version=v5.0 error resolved by copying the following directory from my local machine to the build server:
C:\Program Files (x86)\Reference Assemblies\Microsoft\Framework\.NETCore\v5.0
While the UWP build is successful, no appxbundle is generated. This seems to indicate another dependency is missing from VSBT.

WCF compilation error on CI server: Microsoft.VisualStudio.ServiceModel.targets not found

I am getting this error on my CI server:
error MSB4019: The imported project "C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\WCF\Microsoft.VisualStudio.ServiceModel.targets" was not found
It seems my WCF service library project references that file, but the VisualStudio folder on Program Files\MSBuild\Microsoft doesn't contain a WCF folder.
I guess I need to install something on the server.
What do I need to install?
Well this ruined my morning, but let's not allow it to ruin anyone else's. I couldn't find this information anywhere else. You need to copy a few files from a development machine with VS Pro 2012.
As aphexddb mentions, you need to copy some targets from C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\WCF to the same location on your CI server.
This then references an assembly called Microsoft.VisualStudio.ServiceModel.Core. You can find this assembly in either the GAC or in the IDE directory at C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 11.0\Common7\IDE.
Copy this to your CI server and execute gacutil.exe -i Microsoft.VisualStudio.ServiceModel.Core.dll
This was enough to fix it for me.
This isn't the first time I found targets missing from my VS express install in my CI server. I can't help but feel that there is some sort of package I can download from somewhere that fills all this in. Does anyone know of such a thing? If not, perhaps we should create one.
Can still happen on vs2019
error MSB4019: The imported project "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft
Visual
Studio\2019\Professional\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v16.0\WCF\Microsoft.VisualStudio.ServiceModel.targets"
was not found. Confirm that the path in the declaration is
correct, and that the file exists on disk.
WCF is not installed by default as part of 'ASP.NET and web development' workload. To fix this,
On visual studio installer > modify > individual components tab, search for wcf, check, modify - the .targets file gets now installed, msbuild builds ok.
MSBuild auto-detection: using msbuild version '16.3.2.50909' from 'C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2019\Professional\MSBuild\Current\bin'
I ran into this with Visual Studio 2017, for me the resolution was to modify my installation of Visual Studio to include the Windows Communication Foundation components.
Extract this file into folder
C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\WCF
The file name is "Microsoft.VisualStudio.ServiceModel.targets"
Now you can solve the problem using the Nuget Package MSBuild.Microsoft.VisualStudio.Web.targets
so the build process does not require any change to the build server.
Install-Package MSBuild.Microsoft.VisualStudio.Web.targets
Details:
remove the element for "ServiceModels.targets" in the .csproj file
remove the target WebApplication from the build command (in yaml)
Ran into this same issue. Did the following to resolve:
Installed the Microsoft Web Platform Installer
Copied Directory "C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\WCF" from dev laptop with Visual Studio 2012 to the build server
I've had the same error - my issue was that MS has modified the way MSBuild looks for the versions of VS in the build process template.
Make sure to use the right build process template.
If using TFS2013 and VS2013 use TfvcTemplate.12.xaml
I ran into this same error. In my case, the problem was that my Visual Studio 2008 project didn't get upgraded correctly, probably due to files being marked "read-only" by my source control. To fix it, I loaded the solution in Visual Studio 2015 with everything checked out.
The specific line in the .csproj file changed from
<Import Project="$(MSBuildExtensionsPath32)\Microsoft\VisualStudio\WCF\Microsoft.VisualStudio.ServiceModel.targets" />
To
<Import Project="$(WcfServiceModelTargetPath)\Microsoft.VisualStudio.ServiceModel.targets" />
If you are using VS 2022 build tools, it is no longer in the individual components section. It is on the first tab "Workloads", included in ".NET desktop build tools", you will see it in the list on the right-hand side when you select it.

How to run .NET 4 code analysis on build server

On a Windows Server 2003 R2 with .NET 4 SDK but without Visual Studio 2010, I have tried building a Visual Studio 2010 solution with
msbuild MySolution.sln /p:RunCodeAnalysis=true
but that fails.
What is required to run code analysis on such an environment?
I get this error message:
C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v10.0\CodeAnalysis\Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.targets(129,9): error MSB6003:
The specified task executable "FxCopCmd.exe" could not be run.
Could not load file or assembly
'Microsoft.VisualStudio.CodeAnalysis.Sdk, Version=10.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken= b03f5f7f11d50a3a'
or one of its dependencies.
The system cannot find the file specified.
I have installed FxCop from the SDK and without luck pointed the variable FxCopDir to the installed location of FxCopCmd.exe, and also setting this registry entry to that location:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio\10.0\Setup\EDev#FxCopDir
I had the same problem on my MSBuild server and fixed it by:
Installing Windows SDK 7.1
Setting up the registry keys FxCopDir and StanDir in HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio\10.0\Setup\EDev (in Win32).
I then copied over from the dev PC, to the FxCop folder on the build server, the following:
The folder Rule Sets (default installation target is here: C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 14.0\Team Tools\Static Analysis Tools\FxCop)
Microsoft.VisualStudio.CodeAnalysis.Sdk.dll
Microsoft.VisualStudio.CodeAnalysis.Phoenix.dll
phx.dll
Do a search for them on your dev PC with Visual Studio installed to locate them.
Then use the .NET 4.0 version of gacutil.exe to install Microsoft.VisualStudio.CodeAnalysis.Sdk.dll to the GAC.
You should then be able to run code analysis as part of an MSBuild build and have it work properly.
An alternative to FxCop would be to use the tool NDepend that lets write Code Rules over C# LINQ Queries (namely CQLinq). Disclaimer: I am one of the developers of the tool
More than 200 code rules are proposed by default. Customizing existing rules or creating your own rules is straightforward thanks to the well-known C# LINQ syntax.
Rules can be verified live in Visual Studio and at Build Process time, in a generated HTML+javascript report.
Another option might be calling FxCop executable as a build task (from msbuildtasks), saving the result as an XML file that can be parsed within most of the CI tools (like Hudson and CC.NET)