How can I retrieve the Created date from the current .NET assembly?
I'd like to add some realy simple functionality where my app stops working one week after the build date of the main assembly. I already wrote the code that kills my app after a given date. I just need to programmatically retrieve the creation date from the assembly.
The following is based on: https://blog.codinghorror.com/determining-build-date-the-hard-way/
public static class ApplicationInformation
{
/// <summary>
/// Gets the executing assembly.
/// </summary>
/// <value>The executing assembly.</value>
public static System.Reflection.Assembly ExecutingAssembly
{
get { return executingAssembly ?? (executingAssembly = System.Reflection.Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly()); }
}
private static System.Reflection.Assembly executingAssembly;
/// <summary>
/// Gets the executing assembly version.
/// </summary>
/// <value>The executing assembly version.</value>
public static System.Version ExecutingAssemblyVersion
{
get { return executingAssemblyVersion ?? (executingAssemblyVersion = ExecutingAssembly.GetName().Version); }
}
private static System.Version executingAssemblyVersion;
/// <summary>
/// Gets the compile date of the currently executing assembly.
/// </summary>
/// <value>The compile date.</value>
public static System.DateTime CompileDate
{
get
{
if (!compileDate.HasValue)
compileDate = RetrieveLinkerTimestamp(ExecutingAssembly.Location);
return compileDate ?? new System.DateTime();
}
}
private static System.DateTime? compileDate;
/// <summary>
/// Retrieves the linker timestamp.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="filePath">The file path.</param>
/// <returns></returns>
/// <remarks>http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2005/04/determining-build-date-the-hard-way.html</remarks>
private static System.DateTime RetrieveLinkerTimestamp(string filePath)
{
const int peHeaderOffset = 60;
const int linkerTimestampOffset = 8;
var b = new byte[2048];
System.IO.FileStream s = null;
try
{
s = new System.IO.FileStream(filePath, System.IO.FileMode.Open, System.IO.FileAccess.Read);
s.Read(b, 0, 2048);
}
finally
{
if(s != null)
s.Close();
}
var dt = new System.DateTime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0).AddSeconds(System.BitConverter.ToInt32(b, System.BitConverter.ToInt32(b, peHeaderOffset) + linkerTimestampOffset));
return dt.AddHours(System.TimeZone.CurrentTimeZone.GetUtcOffset(dt).Hours);
}
}
I don't think the assembly itself contains it's creation date. I suspect the closest you can get is the creation date of the assembly file itself:
File.GetCreationTime(Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly().Location)
should do the trick.
EDIT:
I think Jeff Atwood's solution, written up by "grenade" in this thread, is probably the better way to go now.
What's wrong with:
System.IO.File.GetLastWriteTime(Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly().Location);
Maybe this post on coding horror may help
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