* dotnet/rel/1.1.0:
Enable VB dotnet new test cases
Fix fedora.23 dockerfile
Updating the ReadMe: "rel-1.0.1" to "rel-1.1.0"
Update Roslyn to 2.3.0-beta4-61830-03
update nuget to 4.3.0-preview4-4258
* rel/1.1.0: (41 commits)
Updating the Sdk to one that includes the error surfacing work.
Update NuGet to 4.3.0-preview2-4082
Update NuGet to 4.3.0-preview1-4081 and SDK to corresponding 1.1.0 based version
Updating MSBuild to 15.3.0-preview-000246-05 to match VS.
Updating the global.json creation to use the IFile interface and adding a unit test to cover it.
Making restore use a config file so that it does not use fallback folders that may exist in the machine.
Dropping a global.json when running the first run experience with a version that matches the version of the CLI being used in the command that triggered the first run.
Updating the websdk version for 1.0
Trying to fix the opensuse42 test failure, where we tried to invoke a tool that target 1.0.4 where the 1.0 runtime is not available.
Pinning the stage0 to the last build out of rel/1.0.1 and adding a project to download 1.0 dependencies for test assets.
Updating the branding to rel/1.1.0
Dummy commit.
Adding the access token to the lzma url.
Dummy change to force a build.
Reverting the msbuild version to the release version.
Adding the web feed to nuget.config, as some packages failed to mirror and we need a build ASAP.
Updating the msbuild, SDK and Web SDK versions.
Dummy commit to kick off the build.
the FSharp.NET.Sdk version `-bundled` contains only the Sdk dir
bump f# sdk package version
...
New file name structure for the runtime and the CLI
per: https://github.com/dotnet/designs/issues/2
The renaming of assets, therefore the dotnet installation scripts must change to accommodate.
Trivial:
"Write-Host" should be "Write-Output"
New RHEL minor versions are compatible with previous RHEL minor
versions. They also replace them: all users using RHEL 7.n are migrated
to RHEL 7.(n+1) by a simple yum upgrade. So just treat all RHEL 7.x
version as RHEL.
This only holds true for minor versions. RHEL 7 is not compatible with
RHEL 6. But since .NET Core only supports RHEL 7, this shouldn't matter.
The script does not install to /usr/local/share/. It instead installs to
$HOME/.dotnet. Fix the doc text.
Also fix the names in code that incorrectly talk about /usr/local/share.
It duplicates functionality achieved by using `--runtime-id linux-x64`.
Remove it and fix callers.
Keep the the --linux-portable flag in the build scripts; that now calls
--runtime-id linux-x64 in the install script.
This lets us specify the runtime id of the desired .NET Core SDK on the
command line. This makes it easier to get the SDK for the desired
runtime without having to modify the install script for new runtimes
unsupported by the current version of this script.
* rel/1.0.1: (66 commits)
Update LZMA license with correct text
Bump to 2.0.0-rc5-61427-04
Remove duplicate installer suffix
Add license text to LZMA SDK license notice
Updating the SDK to 1.0.0-alpha-20170224-6
Updating both platform abstractions and dependency model to 1.0.3.
Bump Roslyn to 2.0.0-rc5-61424-02
Update Stage0 to use the latest build.
Update README with new distros.
Back porting #5597 into rel/1.0.0
Fixing the exclude pattern used by the Migration to exclude WEB SDK globs.
Remove RID from test package creation
Disable migrate and publish web app with content because CI does not have NPM
Adding an E2E test for pack with content during migration.
Fixing a failing test and adding a few more E2E tests around binplace content for migrated projects.
Fix debian_config.json on ubuntu16.10
Updating publish, pack and build of content to use None with Never/false/Never in their metadata for excluded items.
Intermediate commit to get a WIP PR out. This adds the None Update with CopyToOutputDirectory set to Never.
Switching the CopyToOutput for build and publish and the file for pack to use None Update instead of include. Also, fixed the exclude patterns for web apps.
Do not migrate Content that is already included in the Web SDK for web apps.
...
`which` is an external utility. `hash` or `command -v` are built-in
General Commands.
See http://stackoverflow.com/a/677212/863980
I chose `hash` here as `run-build.sh` is already using it.