Reputation: 1717
How can one read the AssemblyFileVersion, or its components AssemblyFileMajorVersion, AssemblyFileMinorVersion, AssemblyFileBuildNumber, AssemblyFileRevision, within the .csproj, following compilation?
I have tried the following which pulls the information from the built assembly:
<Target Name="AfterCompile">
<GetAssemblyIdentity AssemblyFiles="$(TargetPath)">
<Output
TaskParameter="Assemblies"
ItemName="MyAssemblyIdentities"/>
</GetAssemblyIdentity>
<Message Text="AssemblyVersion = %(MyAssemblyIdentities.Version)" />
</Target>
But that retrieves the AssemblyVersion and not the AssemblyFileVersion. There does not seem to be a documented metadata entry for the latter. I also tried:
<Import Project="$(MSBuildExtensionsPath)\ExtensionPack\MSBuild.ExtensionPack.tasks" />
<Target Name="AfterCompile">
<MSBuild.ExtensionPack.Framework.Assembly TaskAction="GetInfo" NetAssembly="$(TargetPath)">
<Output TaskParameter="OutputItems" ItemName="Info" />
</MSBuild.ExtensionPack.Framework.Assembly>
<Message Text="AssemblyFileVersion = %(Info.FileVersion)" />
</Target>
Unfortunately, while this retrieves the correct value, it also file locks the assembly until VS2008 is closed.
Frankly, neither is what I want as I would rather read the information from the AssemblyInfo.cs directly. However, I cannot figure out how to do that. I assumed AssemblyInfo in the MSBuild Extensions was one way, but it seems focused on writing to the AssemblyInfo and not retrieving values from it.
How can I best accomplish this?
Upvotes: 13
Views: 9603
Reputation: 1717
I've managed to solve this using a custom task. The class library DLL is as so (some code adjusted/eliminated for brevity):
using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
using Microsoft.Build.Framework;
namespace GetAssemblyFileVersion
{
public class GetAssemblyFileVersion : ITask
{
[Required]
public string strFilePathAssemblyInfo { get; set; }
[Output]
public string strAssemblyFileVersion { get; set; }
public bool Execute()
{
StreamReader streamreaderAssemblyInfo = null;
Match matchVersion;
Group groupVersion;
string strLine;
strAssemblyFileVersion = String.Empty;
try
{
streamreaderAssemblyInfo = new StreamReader(strFilePathAssemblyInfo);
while ((strLine = streamreaderAssemblyInfo.ReadLine()) != null)
{
matchVersion = Regex.Match(strLine, @"(?:AssemblyFileVersion\("")(?<ver>(\d*)\.(\d*)(\.(\d*)(\.(\d*))?)?)(?:""\))", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase | RegexOptions.IgnorePatternWhitespace | RegexOptions.Singleline | RegexOptions.ExplicitCapture);
if (matchVersion.Success)
{
groupVersion = matchVersion.Groups["ver"];
if ((groupVersion.Success) && (!String.IsNullOrEmpty(groupVersion.Value)))
{
strAssemblyFileVersion = groupVersion.Value;
break;
}
}
}
}
catch (Exception e)
{
BuildMessageEventArgs args = new BuildMessageEventArgs(e.Message, string.Empty, "GetAssemblyFileVersion", MessageImportance.High);
BuildEngine.LogMessageEvent(args);
}
finally { if (streamreaderAssemblyInfo != null) streamreaderAssemblyInfo.Close(); }
return (true);
}
public IBuildEngine BuildEngine { get; set; }
public ITaskHost HostObject { get; set; }
}
}
And in the project file:
<UsingTask AssemblyFile="GetAssemblyFileVersion.dll" TaskName="GetAssemblyFileVersion.GetAssemblyFileVersion" />
<Target Name="AfterCompile">
<GetAssemblyFileVersion strFilePathAssemblyInfo="$(SolutionDir)\AssemblyInfo.cs">
<Output TaskParameter="strAssemblyFileVersion" PropertyName="strAssemblyFileVersion" />
</GetAssemblyFileVersion>
<Message Text="AssemblyFileVersion = $(strAssemblyFileVersion)" />
</Target>
I've tested this and it will read the updated version if you use MSBuild.ExtensionPack.VersionNumber.targets for auto-versioning.
Obviously, this could be easily extended so that a regex is passed from the project file to a more general-purpose custom task in order to obtain any match in any file.
One additional change has to be made to make the ApplicationVersion
update on each build. InitialTargets="AfterCompile"
must be added to the <Project...
. This was solved by Chao Kuo.
Upvotes: 14
Reputation: 1871
If you make the task inherit from AppDomainIsolatedTask, you don't need to the assembly loading from streams. You can just use AppDomain.LoadFrom(file).
Upvotes: 1