user1630889
user1630889

Reputation:

"Can't find the valid AspnetMergePath" on Visual Web Developer Publish?

I am wanting to use Visual Web Developer Express 2010 to publish a website, pre-compiled to a remote server over FTP using the following settings:

My first build/deploy seemed to have gone well, but after my second compilation I receive the following error:

Transformed web.config using C:\path_to_site\Web.Debug.config into obj\Debug\TransformWebConfig\transformed\web.config.
Copying all files to temporary location below for package/publish:
obj\Debug\AspnetCompileMerge\Source.
C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v10.5\Web\Transform\Microsoft.Web.Publishing.AspNetCompileMerge.targets(132,5): Error : Can't find the valid AspnetMergePath

And here's a subset of the content of the Microsoft.Web.Publishing.AspNetConfigurationMerge.targets file:

  <Target
      Name="GetAspNetMergePath"
      DependsOnTargets="$(GetAspNetMergePathDependsOn)"
      Condition ="'$(GetAspNetMergePath)' != 'false'">
    <PropertyGroup>
      <AspnetMergeName>aspnet_merge.exe</AspnetMergeName>
      <AspnetMergePath Condition="Exists('$(TargetFrameworkSDKToolsDirectory)$(AspnetMergeName)')">$(TargetFrameworkSDKToolsDirectory)</AspnetMergePath>
    </PropertyGroup>
    <Error Condition="'$(AspnetMergePath)' == '' Or !Exists($(AspnetMergePath))"
           Text="Can't find the valid AspnetMergePath" />
  </Target>

EDIT: Changing the publish settings to delete all existing files before publishing does not fix the problem after all. I'm assuming that the problem is local for now because of this.

There does not appear to be an AspMergePath tag in my web.config. I am not aware if I am supposed to manually add the tag. However, the path "obj{publish setting}\AspnetCompileMerge\Source" does exist in my project.

And in case it matters, my project name is "TestProject.NET"

Your feedback is appreciated.

Upvotes: 26

Views: 19531

Answers (7)

H.Mahbuby
H.Mahbuby

Reputation: 1

change targetFramework ...

<compilation debug="true" targetFramework="4.8"/>
<httpRuntime targetFramework="4.8"/>

Upvotes: 0

PM12
PM12

Reputation: 434

In my case was missing. It happened after updating Visual Studio 2017 to 15.7.5. Before that it was working fine. I have to add

<TargetFrameworkSDKToolsDirectory>C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v8.1A\bin\NETFX 4.5.1 Tools\</TargetFrameworkSDKToolsDirectory>

It was at Line no 129 in Microsoft.Web.Publishing.AspNetCompileMerge.targets

Upvotes: 1

I hit the same problem.

Edit the Microsoft.Web.Publishing.AspNetConfigurationMerge.targets file and add the following line. Make sure run editor with Administrator Rights.

Looks the correct versión Visual Studio in my case VS2013.

x64

<TargetFrameworkSDKToolsDirectory>C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v8.0A\bin\NETFX 4.0 Tools\</TargetFrameworkSDKToolsDirectory>

x86

<TargetFrameworkSDKToolsDirectory>C:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v8.0A\bin\NETFX 4.0 Tools\</TargetFrameworkSDKToolsDirectory>

And it Works! I can compile my Project.

Upvotes: 1

Ruben Bartelink
Ruben Bartelink

Reputation: 61875

One workaround for all this stuff [including having to install the SDK etc] is to disable the Precompile On Publish option, which requires AspNetMerge to be present even if you're not specifying that you want stuff to be merged in the ultimate output.

I was going to great lengths to figure out how to turn it off, poring over the options dialog and Reading the Friendly Manual to confirm I had it turned off for ages only to realize it was the checkbox outside:

enter image description here

Unchecking yields the following changes to the .pubxml:

-    <PrecompileBeforePublish>True</PrecompileBeforePublish>
-    <EnableUpdateable>True</EnableUpdateable>
-    <DebugSymbols>False</DebugSymbols>
-    <WDPMergeOption>DonotMerge</WDPMergeOption>

Which worked for me.

NB it is however critical to have as covered here both the Web (which will silently make publishing via /p:DeployOnBuild inert) and the WebApplications (which will give a compiler error) subfolders present under %Program Files (x86)%\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v14.0 (assuming Visual Studio 2015 tooling) for publishing to successfully generate packages

Upvotes: 5

tspauld
tspauld

Reputation: 3522

Here is a solution that does not require changing the targets file. The workaround from http://connect.microsoft.com/VisualStudio/feedback/details/786492/publish-cant-find-the-valid-aspnetmergepath suggests passing additional properteries to msbuild. I was able to get it to work using this:

msbuild website.publishproj /p:DeployOnBuild=true /p:PublishProfile=Release /p:VisualStudioVersion=12.0 /p:AspnetMergePath="C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v8.1A\bin\NETFX 4.5.1 Tools\"

The key here is the AspnetMergePath property, which you may need to change if the Windows SDK is installed in a different location. If I include the GetAspNetMergePath property from the workaround it fails, but that may be needed depending on the SDK version.

Upvotes: 13

ialiashkevich
ialiashkevich

Reputation: 715

I hit the same problem. Searched through all microsoft related sites, found a lot of complaints and no intention from microsoft to fix it.

Here how I worked it around at my system. Edit the Microsoft.Web.Publishing.AspNetConfigurationMerge.targets file and add the following line. Please make sure that the Microsoft SDK path is the same on your PC, if not then change it:

<TargetFrameworkSDKToolsDirectory>C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.0A\Bin\</TargetFrameworkSDKToolsDirectory>

Here is how it should look like:

  <Target
  Name="GetAspNetMergePath"
  DependsOnTargets="$(GetAspNetMergePathDependsOn)"
  Condition ="'$(GetAspNetMergePath)' != 'false'">
<PropertyGroup>
  <TargetFrameworkSDKToolsDirectory>C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.0A\Bin\</TargetFrameworkSDKToolsDirectory>
  <AspnetMergeName>aspnet_merge.exe</AspnetMergeName>
  <AspnetMergePath Condition="Exists('$(TargetFrameworkSDKToolsDirectory)$(AspnetMergeName)')">$(TargetFrameworkSDKToolsDirectory)</AspnetMergePath>
</PropertyGroup>
<Error Condition="'$(AspnetMergePath)' == '' Or !Exists($(AspnetMergePath))"
       Text="Can't find the valid AspnetMergePath" />

Upvotes: 15

Andriy K
Andriy K

Reputation: 3427

What you need is aspnet_merge.exe, tool that is distributed as part of Windows SDK. It's intended to precompile sites, so you can either turn that precompilation off, or install proper version of Windows SDK. Reference is to the Wikipedia, because of nice prepared links to the download pages. You don't need to download/install everything (it's huge), just download web installer and select .Net tools, it will take around 50 megabytes.

Please, notice that bundled with Visual Studio 2010 Windows SDK ver. 7.0A isn't available to separate download, so you'll have to either install Visual Studio on your build server, or tweak something as described in answers to "Running MSBuild fails to read SDKToolsPath".

Upvotes: 13

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