This enables users to use the CLI on newer versions of the OS that aren't fully supported yet - for example using a new OSX version that isn't listed in the runtime graph in the current NuGet packages.
Fix#4238
* Add support for IncludeFramework for net403 and MonoAndroid (dotnet/cli#3128)
* Fallback mechanism for FrameworkList.xml from Mono/Xamarin that don't contain File elements (dotnet/cli#3128)
* Just using a foreach, as suggested by David Fowler (davidfowl)
PR #2493 introduced the new project.json schema. The tree has 118 files
with the old schema, which added several hundred warnings.
This change can't go in until PR #2864 does - it relies on those bug
fixes.
When building a project.json that has schema warnings (and other warnings), we are not writing the warnings to the console. This is a regression.
The fix is to add all diagnostic messages to the LibraryManager, which is responsible to hold all the diagnostic messages.
Fix 3021
This is required to update the corefx dependencies from RC2 to RC3. Some
of the corefx libs have 'netstandard1.6' as TFM and this version of Nuget
supports that TFM.
Also the 'VersionRange.IncludePrerelease' has been removed from nuget and by
default 'VersionRange.Satisfies' returns true for any prerelease version.
The following packages are changing:
Microsoft.NetCore.App: 1.0.0-rc2-3002702 -> 1.0.0-rc3-002702
Microsoft.NETCore.DotNetHost: 1.0.1-rc2-002702-00 -> 1.0.1-rc3-002702-00
Microsoft.NETCore.DotNetHostPolicy: 1.0.1-rc2-002702-00 ->
1.0.1-rc3-002702-00
Microsoft.NETCore.DotNetHostResolver: 1.0.1-rc2-002702-00 ->
1.0.1-rc3-002702-00
Also publishing the *deb file to teh debian repo feed is disabled -
https://github.com/dotnet/cli/issues/2973
The issue is when the ProjectContextBuilder sees a CompileTimePlaceholder "_._" file on a full framework, it assumes that dependency has to come from the "Reference Assemblies" directory. If it can't be found there, an error is raised. However, there are other reasons "_._" placeholders are created (when a NuGet package doesn't want its dependencies to be exposed in the Compile dependencies of its consumers). And these placeholders can exist for assemblies that aren't in the full framework - in this case System.Diagnostics.FileVersionInfo and others.
To fix this, if the reference can't be resolved from the "Reference Assemblies" folder, it is just skipped. If the compiler really needs that assembly, it will raise an error to the user. Dotnet build shouldn't raise the error.
Fix#2906