This commit attempts to make the command line help user experience for `dotnet`
more consistent for all of the built-in SDK commands.
The following has been changed:
* Organized the top-level help into a section detailing how to run .NET
applications and a section on running SDK commands.
* Sorted the SDK commands by name (previous ordering was undefined).
* Removed `--verbosity` from the "common options section" since it is not a
top-level option, nor is it common to all commands.
* Added missing parameter names for parameterized options (especially for the
`dotnet tool` subcommands).
* Fixed the localization of parameter names for parameterized options.
* Added missing `PROJECT` parameter to a few commands.
* Fixed the localization of the build command's `PROJECT` parameter description.
* Fixed the confusing descriptions for the `--framework`, `--configuration`,
and `--runtime` options that were being shared between different commands.
* Fixed the "unknown command" error for `dotnet help <command>` to show in red.
* Deleted .resx for `dotnet msbuild` that is no longer used.
* Change the option descriptions to be more consistent in their grammatical
structure.
* Removed extra blank line from end of help output.
Fixes#7431.
Fixes#9230.
Fixes#9165.
This commit adds a few simple unit tests to cover the `dotnet complete`
command.
It only checks the top-level output, integration with the `new`
command from the templating engine, and the custom `nuget` command parser that
is solely intended for use with `dotnet complete`.
This commit improves command completion by updating the `new` and `nuget` parsers to
match their current supported syntax. Removes the unnecessary description
strings that were not used (these commands are parsed by assemblies external to
the CLI). The top level options are also sync'd to the currently supported
options.
Additionally, it unhides the `msbuild` and `vstest` commands so that `dotnet
complete` suggests them.
Fixes#9286.
The `dotnet sln list` command uses `Project reference(s)` as the header for the
output instead of `Project(s)`. To be consistent with Visual Studio, the header
should refer to these as projects rather than project references as users can't
add "project references" to a solution.
This commit changes the header to `Project(s)`.
Additionally, the command now filters out solution folders and only shows
projects.
Fixes#9246.
Commit 10289504a8 changed the default verbosity
option used for MSBuild from `-v:quiet` to `-verbosity:quiet`. This triggered a
match that was being done against arguments starting with `-verbosity` to
forward the value to VSTest via the `VSTestVerbosity` property. The result is
that VSTest is using a default verbosity of `quiet`, suppressing error output
that users expect to see.
The fix is to change the check to only match against user-supplied options.
The default level the command uses for MSBuild is not forwarded to VSTest.
Fixes#9229.
This commit fixes adding the tools directory to the user's PATH for the native
installers.
The issue was a regression caused by #8886. The change used a "no-op" sentinel
file that reported it existed. This "no-op" sentinel was used for the native
installers. Unlike the other "no-op" sentinels used by the native installer,
we do want PATH to be modified by the native installer.
The fix is to change the "no-op" sentinel to report the file doesn't exist, but
also to not to attempt to create the file.
This fixes#9208.
The `GivenFailedPackageInstallWhenRunWithPackageIdItShouldFail` test should
match against `ToolInstallationFailedWithRestoreGuidance` and not
`ToolInstallationFailed`. This passed prior to the LOC update because
the former started with the latter and a "contains" match was being performed.
On Windows, the Razor server correctly creates the pid file with
`FileAccess.Write` and `FileOptions.DeleteOnClose`. This requires a share mode
of `FileShare.Write | FileShare.Delete` to open. However, the
`dotnet build-server shutdown` command was opening the file with
`FileShare.Read`. As a result, an `IOException` was being thrown and was not
handled.
This change first opens the file with the appropriate share access and also
properly handles a failure to access or read the contents of the pid file.
Additionally, an integration test was added to test that Razor server shutdown
works as expected.
Fixes#9158.
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.
Commit 9cc2b7cd2f regressed the `--source-feed`
option so that it no longer accepted relative paths. Because the option is now
saved to the temp project file, any relative paths specified by the
`--source-feed` option were made relative to the temp project path and not from
the current working directory of where dotnet was run.
The fix is to use `Path.GetFullPath` of the `--source-feed` option, provided
the option specified was not an absolute URI.
Fixes#9132.
Should use MsBuildProjectExtensionsPath instead.
Change the property passin by project file instead of command line. It is more reliable passing path in xml and also the timing of MsBuildProjectExtensionsPath is controlled. (Before loading SDK)
Change mock fake project to use “;” instead, since c:\path contains “:”.
Test build was causing restore and build in same evaluation, which was
always incorrect, but with a recent change to sdk, it will always fail
outright instead of sometimes getting lucky enough for it not to matter.
This was therefore a breaking change and we will discuss separately how
to handle it. This takes the bad pattern out of the test build to unblock
the build.
Previously, Razor server discovery for the `build-server shutdown` command was
implemented by invoking MSBuild on a project file in the current directory to
evaluate the path to the Razor server dll. This was problematic since it would
only discover a single running Razor server instance and required that the user
run the `build-server shutdown` command from a specific location.
Razor's server now writes a "pid file" to a well-known location
(`~/.dotnet/pids/build`) which the command can now enumerate to discover, and
shutdown, the running Razor servers.
This commit changes the Razor server discovery to use the pid files and removes
the requirement that users need to run the command in specific directories to
work.
Fixes#9084.