Reputation: 1177
I have a TFSBuild.proj file and I need to add date/time logging for statistics i.e. which parts of the builds take the most time and where can we improve the process.
The build outputs the log to BuildLog.txt. I use the following tags to get custom messages in the BuildLog.txt file, but I need to add a timestamp to each message.
<Message Text="Debug: BeforeGet start: StartTimeGoesHere"></Message>
<Message Text="Debug: BeforeGet end: EndTimeGoesHere"></Message>
Is it possible to get a timestamp in the message? Is there a MSBuild variable that gets the current datetime value? In the example above, StartTimeGoesHere will be something like "01 Jan 2001 14:10:12" and EndTimeGoesHere will be something like "01 Jan 2001 14:14:43".
Upvotes: 6
Views: 1932
Reputation: 5993
You need to use the MS Build Community Tasks. It has a Time task that will give you what you want.
http://msbuildtasks.tigris.org/
<Time Format="yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss">
<Output TaskParameter="FormattedTime" PropertyName="currentTime" />
</Time>
You will need to setup a start and end time and you will need to be careful about where you invoke the tasks.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 9938
You don't need any third party support as long as you are using MSBuild 4.0. Just use a property function within a target,
<PropertyGroup>
<DateTimeNow>$([System.DateTime]::Now)</DateTimeNow>
</PropertyGroup>
which will create the following value for $(DateTimeNow),
6/26/2011 9:00:27 PM
Upvotes: 9