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BuildFromSource.md

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Build ASP.NET Core from Source

Building ASP.NET Core from source allows you tweak and customize ASP.NET Core, and to contribute your improvements back to the project.

See https://github.com/aspnet/AspNetCore/labels/area-infrastructure for known issues and to track ongoing work.

Install pre-requistes

Windows

Building ASP.NET Core on Windows requires:

macOS/Linux

Building ASP.NET Core on macOS or Linux requires:

Clone the source code

ASP.NET Core uses git submodules to include source from a few other projects.

For a new copy of the project, run:

git clone --recursive https://github.com/aspnet/AspNetCore

To update an existing copy, run:

git submodule update --init --recursive

Building in Visual Studio / Code

Before opening our .sln files in Visual Studio or VS Code, you need to perform the following actions.

  1. Executing the following on command-line:

    .\restore.cmd
    

    This will download required tools and build the entire repository once. At that point, you should be able to open .sln files to work on the projects you care about.

    💡 Pro tip: you will also want to run this command after pulling large sets of changes. On the master branch, we regularly update the versions of .NET Core SDK required to build the repo. You will need to restart Visual Studio every time we update the .NET Core SDK.

  2. Use the startvs.cmd script to open Visual Studio .sln files. This script first sets required environment variables.

Solution files

We don't have a single .sln file for all of ASP.NET Core because Visual Studio doesn't currently handle projects of this scale. Instead, we have many .sln files which include a sub-set of projects. These principles guide how we create and manage .slns:

  1. Solution files are not used by CI or command line build scripts. They are for meant for use by developers only.
  2. Solution files group together projects which are frequently edited at the same time.
  3. Can't find a solution that has the projects you care about? Feel free to make a PR to add a new .sln file.

💡 Pro tip: dotnet new sln and dotnet sln are one of the easiest ways to create and modify solutions.

Known issue: NU1105

Opening solution files may produce an error code NU1105 with a message such

Unable to find project information for 'C:\src\AspNetCore\src\Hosting\Abstractions\src\Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting.Abstractions.csproj'. Inside Visual Studio, this may be because the project is unloaded or not part of current solution. Otherwise the project file may be invalid or missing targets required for restore.

This is a known issue in NuGet (NuGet/Home#5820) and we are working with them for a solution. See also dotnet#4183 to track progress on this.

The workaround for now is to add all projects to the solution.

dotnet sln add C:\src\AspNetCore\src\Hosting\Abstractions\src\Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting.Abstractions.csproj

PATH

For VS Code and Visual Studio and dotnet commands to work correctly, you must place the following location in your PATH. Use the following commands to update the PATH variable in a command line window.

Windows (Command Prompt)

set PATH=%USERPROFILE%\.dotnet\x64;%PATH%

Windows (Powershell)

$env:PATH="$env:USERPROFILE\.dotnet\x64;$env:PATH"

Linux/macOS:

export PATH="$HOME/.dotnet:$PATH"

On Windows, we recommend using the startvs.cmd command to launch Visual Studio.

Building on command-line

You can also build the entire project on command line with the build.cmd/.sh scripts.

On Windows:

.\build.cmd

On macOS/Linux:

./build.sh

Running tests on command-line

Tests are not run by default. Use the -test option to run tests in addition to building.

On Windows:

.\build.cmd -test

On macOS/Linux:

./build.sh --test

Building a subset of the code

This repository is large. Look for build.cmd/.sh scripts in subfolders. These scripts can be used to invoke build and test on a smaller set of projects.

Furthermore, you can use flags on build.cmd/.sh to build subsets based on language type, like C++, TypeScript, or C#. Run build.sh --help or build.cmd -help for details.

Build properties

Additional properties can be added as an argument in the form /property:$name=$value, or /p:$name=$value for short. For example:

.\build.cmd /p:Configuration=Release

Common properties include:

Property Description
BuildNumberSuffix (string). A specific build number, typically from a CI counter, which is appended to the pre-release label.
Configuration Debug or Release. Default = Debug.
SharedFxRID The runtime identifier of the shared framework.

Use the result of your build

After building ASP.NET Core from source, you will need to install and use your local version of ASP.NET Core. See "Artifacts" for more explanation of the different folders produced by a build.

  • Run the installers produced in artifacts/{Debug, Release}/installers/ for your platform.

  • Add a NuGet.Config to your project directory with the following content:

    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
    <configuration>
        <packageSources>
            <clear />
            <add key="MyBuildOfAspNetCore" value="C:\src\aspnet\AspNetCore\artifacts\Debug\packages\product\" />
            <add key="NuGet.org" value="https://api.nuget.org/v3/index.json" />
        </packageSources>
    </configuration>

    NOTE: This NuGet.Config should be with your application unless you want nightly packages to potentially start being restored for other apps on the machine.

  • Update the versions on PackageReference items in your .csproj project file to point to the version from your local build.

    <ItemGroup>
      <PackageReference Include="Microsoft.AspNetCore.SpaServices" Version="3.0.0-preview-0" />
    </ItemGroup>

Some features, such as new target frameworks, may require prerelease tooling builds for Visual Studio. These are available in the Visual Studio Preview.

Resx files

If you need to make changes to a .resx file, run dotnet msbuild /t:Resx <path to csproj>. This will update the generated C#.