Its been a while since I setup a Build Server so maybe I've forgotten something or maybe .NET 4.5 is different from whatever version I did this with last time, but here is my problem.
I'm trying to setup a build server to monitor a source control repository. Whenever something changes, I want the server to pull the changes and build the project. If there are no errors, I want to deploy the site to a web site running on the build server.
In the past when I did this, I thought that I was able to do this having only .NET installed, but when I try to build this project I get an error that "C:\Program Files\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\v11.0\WebApplications\Microsoft.WebApplication.targets" is missing, and if I go and look I can see that it is missing. In fact there are no Visual Studio 11 targets files.
After a lot of thought and head scratching, I went out and got the "Windows 8/.NET 4.5 SDK" thinking that the .NET 4.5 SDK might install the targets files that I needed, but it did not unless I installed it wrong somehow.
So, what do I need to put on the Build Server in order to get the project to build. I would prefer not to have to install the full Visual Studio 2012.
NET Core can be installed in two ways: By installing Visual Studio 2017/2019 or by installing . NET Core Runtime or SDK.
NET Framework 4.7. 1 for Visual Studio 2017. However, if you do not want to do more experiments, then I suggest not to install it. Because it may not be stable, so it is highly recommended that please go with installation only if you want to do something with the experimental version.
ASP.NET apps can be developed and run on Linux, Windows, macOS, and Docker.
To run on on your CI server without Visual Studio, you only need to copy a few folders from a development machine to the same location on the CI server. There is no need to install the SDK.
VS 2015:
VS 2013:
VS 2012:
VS 2010:
.NET 4.6:
.NET 4.5.2:
.NET 4.5.1:
.NET 4.5:
.NET 4.0.1:
.NET 4.0:
Or, as Matt suggested, you could copy them into a subdirectory of your project and alter the <MSBuildExtensionsPath32>
location in your MSBuild (typically .csproj
or .vbproj
) file.
Once you have done this, your project will compile.
You should also set the VisualStudioVersion environment variable explicitly to the Visual Studio version (10.0 for VS2010, 11.0 for VS2012, 12.0 for VS2013, 14.0 for VS2015) you are using just to be sure it is set right in your configuration.
My problem was related to installing the Windows Software Development Kit (SDK) for Windows 8 on a Windows 2008 Box. If you read further on the page, you will get to a heading labeled ".NET Framework 4.5 SDK Tools on Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008." This tells you to:
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