I have a problem with the NuGet package manager. I published my library (a type provider, but I don't think this matters) and then testet it, but it fails to find a dependency. The complete error message is (full namespace/name ommitted for brevity):
The type provider 'TypeProviderImplementation....' reported an error:
Could not load file or assembly 'dotNetRDF', Version=1.0.3.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=...' or one of its dependencies.
The thing is that when installing the library, it looks like the dependencies are installed correctly. The correct libraries are downloaded and there is no error showing up.
In an attempt to solve the problem, I specified the exact version in the .nuspec file, but this didn't change anything.
...
Installing dotNetRDF via NuGet and then manually referencing my precompiled DLL (without going through NuGet) seems to work fine.
So I'm basically out of ideas on how to solve or even debug the problem. I'm thankful for any pointers.
Addign more information about .NET version numbers as my comment below is quite hard to read:
I checked framework versions as suggested. I did this via looking at the FrameworkDisplayName in the object browser. Basically, my library was using 4.5 and dotNetRDF was using 4.0.
I switched to .NET 4.0, but nothing changed.
My library = ".NET Framework 4"
dotNetRDF = ".NET Framework 4"
HtmlAgilityPack = ".NET Framework 4.5"
Newtonsoft.Json = ".NET Framework 4.5"
VDS.Common = ".NET Framework 4 Client Profile"
My dependency is dotNetRDF, the remaining ones are dependencies of dotNetRDF.
Latest NuSpec file can be found here. I create the package via the command nuget pack LITEQ.fsproj -Prop Configuration=Release.
The package id is LITEQ.RDF.
Some additional information:
The library is a F# project. I just tested what happens if I create a console project and install the library via NuGet and then send the references to the F# Interactive Console. It actually works in this case.
So it feels like there is some problem with the project configuration after installing the library via NuGet.
To reproduce, the error, download the library, open up the UniKo.West.Liteq namespace and for example use the NpqlTypeProvider:
open Uniko.West.Liteq
type A = NpqlRdfProvider< #"">
Certainly for me I can't see any obvious problems, when I install your package into an empty console project I don't have any issues and I can write a trivial example that uses the dotNetRDF APIs just fine. If you can produce a minimal example project into which installing the packages creates an issue then that would be very helpful.
Your Issue
However the dependencies you state for your project look wrong, you have .Net 4.0 for your project and some dependencies but .Net 4.5 for others which will not work. Note that when you downgrade a projects target framework NuGet does not cope nicely with that, it is best to completely uninstall and reinstall NuGet packages any time you change the target framework version. It is perfectly fine for a newer version of the framework to rely on dependencies that target older versions, so your .Net 4.5 project can happily depend on the .Net 4.0 version of dotNetRDF. However the reverse is not true which may be the cause of your problems.
You can sometimes tell if this is the case because VS may highlight bad dependencies under References in the solution explorer with little warning icons (sadly it doesn't always do this). Even if this is not the case you should see output like the following in the Output Window when you try and build if you have incompatible dependencies and this may also yield compile errors about missing namespaces:
C:\Program Files
(x86)\MSBuild\12.0\bin\Microsoft.Common.CurrentVersion.targets(1697,5):
warning MSB3274: The primary reference "HtmlAgilityPack" could not be
resolved because it was built against the ".NETFramework,Version=v4.5"
framework. This is a higher version than the currently targeted
framework ".NETFramework,Version=v4.0".
So I would strongly suggest that you uninstall all packages via NuGet and reinstall them whenever you change the target .Net framework of your project.
Other Issues
In terms of other possible issues you are using dotNetRDF 1.0.3 which is not the latest version, versions prior to 1.0.5 have a known issue related to interactions with the versioning and framework profiles of Json.Net. If a project you are installing into also has dependencies on Json.Net you may run into version conflict issues. See CORE-405: Resolve Issues with Json.Net dependency for some discussion on this.
I would suggest that you also upgrade your dependency to the latest dotNetRDF release which is 1.0.6.3421 at the time of writing this answer and see if that resolves your problem.
Edit - NuGet Package Versions
NuGet packages versions do not have to correspond to the assembly version, as it happens 1.0.6.3421 does have an assembly version of 1.0.3.0. That was actually not our intention but a flaw in our build process but that isn't really relevant here.
What it looks like is that your library is compiled against a different version of dotNetRDF than the one NuGet is installing for you. However without seeing the source of your package it is impossible to debug further.
What if neither solution works?
If neither of these things resolves your problem then you are going to need to provide a minimal project that reproduces the problem.
A temporary solution (or more of a hack) is to not rely on dependencies, but to directly put the DLLs into the NuGet package. When I do this, the library works fine. The NuSpec file in this case looks like this (excerpt):
<package>
<metadata>
...
</metadata>
<files>
<file src="bin\Release\dotNetRDF.dll" target="lib/net40" />
<file src="bin\Release\HtmlAgilityPack.dll" target="lib/net40" />
<file src="bin\Release\HtmlAgilityPack.pdb" target="lib/net40" />
<file src="bin\Release\HtmlAgilityPack.xml" target="lib/net40" />
...
</files>
</package>
But obviously, this isn't a good solution.
Related
I am developing a project in VS2019. When I compile it, I receive the following warning:
warning : Your project specifies TypeScriptToolsVersion 3.7, but a matching compiler was not found. The latest available TypeScript compiler will be used (3.8). To remove this warning, install the TypeScript 3.7 SDK or update the value of TypeScriptToolsVersion.
I was trying to find where TypeScript version is specified but I did not find it. Microsoft.TypeScript.targets does not define it, however, if it would, I think I could change the value by not modifying that file directly.
Where can I fix that?
Jaime
Go to your project Properties -> "TypeScript build" tab and in the field: "TypeScript version" either choose specific version or select "Use latest available"
Look for TypeScriptToolsVersion tags in your csproj files and update to required version.
#BogdanRB answer above only displayed "Use latest available" and "4.2" for me. I did some research and apparently "4.2" is the SDK version installed together with Visual Studio 2019 (which I couldn't remove since it's required for lots of other VS components).
I was working on a legacy project that uses TypeScript "3.1.1", the version specified in package.json installed via npm. In order to line up the editor's IntelliSense and the compilation, and avoid using unsupported TS syntax, I've opened my ASP.NET Core MVC .csproj file and removed the following line:
<TypeScriptToolsVersion>Latest</TypeScriptToolsVersion>
Now Visual Studio's IntelliSense is compatible with the one specified in the npm package. It even works inside *.vue templates, in case you're using Vue with TypeScript.
I can not use the SqlType provider due to an issue with Microsoft.Bcl.AsyncInterfaces.
I am using a minimal program with .NET 4.7.2 and F# 4.7.0.0.
My Nuget packages contain a reference to:
package id="Microsoft.Bcl.AsyncInterfaces" version="1.0.0"
targetFramework="net472"
Severity Code Description Project File Line Suppression State
Error FS3033 The type provider 'FSharp.Data.Sql.SqlTypeProvider'
reported an error: Unable to load one or more of the requested types.
Retrieve the LoaderExceptions property for more information. Details:
Could not load file or assembly 'Microsoft.Bcl.AsyncInterfaces,
Version=1.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=cc7b13ffcd2ddd51' or
one of its dependencies. Das System kann die angegebene Datei nicht
finden. TestSqlProvider C:\Users\weism\source\repos\TestSqlProvider\TestSqlProvider\Program.fs 9 Active
What can I do to fix this issue?
For me, installing the Microsoft.Bcl.AsyncInterfaces (Nuget package) fixed the issue.
This error also happens when you try using Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore v5 in a dotnet core v3.1 project.
To resolve, down-version Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore to latest v3 version.
For .Net Core, This problem basically occur , when we use layered architecture. Just make sure the version of Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore should be same in all project, wherever it is used.
I don't use Microsoft.Bcl.AsyncInterfaces at all in my .NET 4.8 project. Some library depends on version 1.0.0.0. I resolved the issue using a binding redirect:
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="Microsoft.Bcl.AsyncInterfaces" publicKeyToken="cc7b13ffcd2ddd51" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-5.0.0.0" newVersion="5.0.0.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
Microsoft.Bcl.AsyncInterfaces.dll 5 was copied to Bin after build.
I think you update package in one layer.
for me i worked in project with three layers (api, AdminTool, Data) the AdminTool Layer had a reference to Data Layer i updated all packages in AdminTool only so i had this error i update package also in data layer and api layer so the problem solved.
I hope that help you.
My Entity Framework Core just needed upgraded
TO
Make sure you have unique single version of that dll. Another step would be to add a binding redirect in the app.config as told in the above comments.
Check in your installed nuget packages---
If version of Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore and your .net project is different then it can be a problem.
Example - If EntityFrameworkCore is at v5.1.5 or higher & your project dotnet core v3.1 project, this can be the issue.
To solve,
down-version Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore to equal version of project such as v3 version. to down version click on tool in visual studio -->Nuget Package Manager--> Manage Nuget package for Solutions --> click on installed ---> select nuget package which you want to downgrade --> click on uninstall and then select the same nuget package and then install version 3.1.5 or relevent package.
or
Install Microsoft.Bcl.AsyncInterfaces (Nuget package)
Updating the Microsoft.Bcl.AsyncInterfaces assembly via NuGet did everything it needed to do, including adding the bindingRedirect entries in the appropriate config files.
I also did all the other hygienics. I cleaned my solution, deleted the bin and obj directory entries, and also cleaned my localhost deploy locations.
However, I still got this error. I reviewed the output (my application is a .NET 4.8 MVC Web application, so the web page showed the error log in detail), and I found that it was failing on loading SimpleInjector.
I updated SimpleInjector to the latest version via NuGet and that fixed my error.
Unfortunately, I didn't keep a copy of the error page, so I can't show you what I saw, but the bottom line is to examine the output or log in detail, see if you can find where the application is attempting to load the assembly that is failing, and update that assembly that appears to be calling the load.
I was able to fix it by removing <Private>True</Private> from csproj for Microsoft.Bcl.AsyncInterfaces. Just reinstall this NuGet package
every time i clone Abp.ModuleZero to my machine when i run nuget command update-database the error show me and when i build the solution in viusal studio the project doesn't build and show many errors in error list console window
most of them is like :
The type 'Object' is defined in an assembly that is not referenced.
You must add a reference to assembly 'netstandard, Version=2.0.0.0,
Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=cc7b13ffcd2ddd51'
i try to install Netstandard.library package from package manager console window but doesn't any sense.
my visual studio IDE version is 2015 Update 3.
ABP v3.0.0 is based on .NET Standard 2.0.
This concerns you regardless if you are on MVC 5.x, .NET Framework 4.x or .NET Core 2.x.
You should use VS2017 15.3.3+.
For VS2015, you may try installing NuGet client 3.6 or higher but that may no longer work.
i think downgrade to earlier version of this framework is good solution for me, where can i download early version of ABP framework like 2.3.4?
I don't see why you would download the framework, but it's on GitHub.
If you meant download a template that uses an earlier version of ABP:
You can only choose the project version for premium startup templates.
You can build your own from module-zero-core-template/releases/tag/v2.5.1.
You need to rename the files and folders yourself.
I just downloaded the FSlab journal template from fslab.org. when I try to run the tutorial.fsx I get a number of errors in the build.fsx. These errors seem to be specific to the suave library.
The first issue is “open Suave.HTTP.Files” apparently there is no Files namespace.
Second, the script uses an UTF8 data type that cannot be found.
Third, the script also uses an Applicatives type that cannot be found.
When I went on github to look at Suave I found that the Suave.HTTP.Files namespace had been deprecated in favor of Suave.Files but when I added that namespace it didn’t fix anything.
I am using paket to pull the latest versions of all the dependencies. I am using VS 2013.
Is there some step in FsLab journal template that I am missing? Is the latest version of Suave no longer compatible with FsLab?
Can you please open an issue for this on FsLab's GitHub?
The FsLab template always gets the latest version of all dependencies, which works fine when there are no breaking API changes. Suave 1.0 (released just now) went through a lot of much needed cleanup, but it has breaking API changes.
We'll need to update the template to the latest version of Suave. In the meantime, you can explicitly require version 0.33.0. I just did this change in the template - all you need to do is to add the version number in paket.dependencies:
nuget FsLab
nuget FsLab.Runner
nuget FAKE
nuget Suave 0.33.0
When you change the last line as above after downloading the template, things should work!
I created a new Project in Visual Studio 2013, a WebApi & MVC 5 project and updated all nuget packages. It updated to mvc 5.1. Now I cannot Successfully build the project it says
assembly uses System.Web.Http 5.1.0.0 which has a higher version than referenced assembly System.Web.Http 5.0.0.0
Anyone run into this before? Why these kind of problems do occur so often in Visual Studio? Does anybody know how to solve this because I really am trying hard but no luck so far...
Solved
I opened the Package Manager Console in Visual Studio and run the command
PM> Update-package
It magically resolved everything for me. You can find Package Manager Console under
Tools
Nuget Package Manager
Package Manager Console
This command deletes all the old packages under the package folder and updates everything if necessary, you may also run the command on a specific package. Here all the variants of the command http://docs.nuget.org/docs/reference/package-manager-console-powershell-reference#Update-Package
Let me know if you found this useful I'm curious to know if it just happened to me accidentally
A new version of ASP.NET was released. Announcement here : http://blogs.msdn.com/b/webdev/archive/2014/01/20/announcing-the-release-of-asp-net-mvc-5-1-asp-net-web-api-2-1-and-asp-net-web-pages-3-1.aspx
You probably have two projects in your solution, where project A references project B. Both projects reference ASP.NET, but there is a version mismatch.
I had a very similar problem to yours exactly with a reference to System.Web.Http and have documented it here:
Could not load assembly error
When you update a Nuget package it would update dependent packages. But it would not update other packages in your solution that depend on the updated packages. These other packages might not even have a newer version built with the udpated packages.
So the solution is either to udpate all your packages like you did (this might not always work) or add binding redirects to the latest version of your assembly reference to your application config.
I solved this way. As I currently have fwk 4.0.0.0 and don't want to install 5.X:
I removed the referenced DLLs
I removed a couple of bindingRedirects at packages.config,
Then I rebuilded that solution, that throws me errors
Then I added the reference again
And voilà, the solution is running with the fwk that I have.