This reverts commit f9b939fe89.
That fix caused a regression that prevented a single `/property` option to
define multiple properties using the `/property:First=foo;Second=bar` syntax.
Users that want literal semicolons in the property values should use escaped
quotes around the property value, e.g. `/property:Prop='"foo;bar;baz"'`.
Fixes#9369.
This commit ensures that any `/property` option's value is surrounded by quotes
to allow MSBuild to properly interpret special characters like semicolons.
Users familiar with MSBuild expect `/property:Name="Value"` to handle
semicolons. However, since `dotnet` parses the command line first, the
quotes get processed by its command line parser. This results in
`/property:Name=Value` being passed to MSBuild, which will not parse a "Value"
containing a semicolon correctly.
Since it is safe to always quote the property value for this option, this fix
simply ensures that the value is surrounded by quotes.
This fixes the issue for all commands that forward arguments to MSBuild.
Fixes#7791.
It is not currently possible when there is a -f|--framework argument because
we cannot force a TargetFramework global property on to the restore evaluation.
Doing so completely breaks restore by applying the TargetFramework to all
projects transitively. The correct behavior is to restore for all frameworks,
then build/publish/etc for the given target framework. Achieving that still
requires two distinct msbuild invocations.
This also changes the verbosity of implicit restore from quiet to that
of the subsequent command (default=minimal). Similar to global properties,
we cannot specify a distinct console verbosity for the /restore portion of
the overall execution. For consistency, we apply the same verbosity change
to the case where we still use two separate msbuild invocations.
This also fixes an issue where the separate restore invocation's msbuild log
would be overwritten by the subsequent command execution. However, this remains
unfixed in the case where we still use two separate msbuild invocations.