Visual studio 2017 community Edition - Nuget.exe not found - visual-studio-2017

I have been trying to configure a project level nuget.config file as per the various documentation and instructions I found online from MSDN and other sources. I have visual studio 2017 community edition installed. I can't seem to find nuget.exe so I can configure the local nuget.config file with my settings as well as tell nuget to use the new project level nuget.config.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/nuget/reference/nuget-config-file#config-section
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/nuget/consume-packages/configuring-nuget-behavior
I launched developer command prompt in administrator mode and when I type NUGET to access nuget.exe, I got error that command not found.
I am trying to figure out where I need to be so when I run the following command nuget can resolve:
nuget config -set repositoryPath=c:\packages -configfile .\myApp\NuGet.Config
I get:
'nuget' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable
program or batch file.
I tried searching for nuget.exe everywhere on my machine, but can't seem to find it.
Do I need to re-download and install the exe? It seems that it is already built-in to visual studio and I would ideally like to leverage that same version installed.
Would appreciate any input, ideas or help.
Many Thanks!!!!

Found the answer.While the package manager console is available and comes with visual studio 2017. Nuget.exe is not included only the dlls for nuget are. That is clearly outlined in the downloads page of NUGET.
https://www.nuget.org/downloads

Related

Building and running unit tests with Visual Studio build tools

I am adding unit tests to an existing C++ Visual Studio projects, using the Google Test adapter.
It's all running fine on my computer with Visual Studio 2019, but when I try to run them on the build server I get the following error
error : This project references NuGet package(s) that are missing on this computer. Use NuGet Package Restore to download them. For more information, see http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=322105. The missing file is ..\packages\Microsoft.googletest.v140.windesktop.msvcstl.static.rt-dyn.1.8.1.3\build\native\Microsoft.googletest.v140.windesktop.msvcstl.static.rt-dyn.targets.
However, we're not using NuGet for package management. I tried installing it but complained about missing folders. This is not a .NET project, so I think that's a red herring.
I was able to install the Google Test adapter on my computer using the Visual Studio Installer, but it does not show up as a part of the VS Build Tools on the build server.
Running msbuild -t:restore does not help, it just reports "nothing to do."
I don't understand why the Google Test adapter isn't available for VS Build Tools, since it seems to be required in order to build the unit tests. Does anyone know why it doesn't work? What's the best practice for handling this?
Thanks!
The problem is that your c++ project has missed the content of googletest nuget package. So the solution is to restore the whole nuget package in your c++ project.
Update 1
First of all, take a brand new backed up project and restore it to when the problem started.
Besides, msbuild -t:restore command applies to projects with PackageReference nuget management format.
Since your c++ project used packages.config nuget management format, msbuild -t:restore will not work. See this official document.Instead, you should use nuget restore command.
This command works for your current project and running this command will restore the nuget packages and then you will never face the issue.
Before using it, you should download nuget.exe CLI and config its path into System Environment Variable PATH so that CMD can invoke nuget.
The steps about configing nuget.exe, you can refer to this link.
Steps
1) delete packages folder under the solution folder
2)Then, open build tool, run:
nuget restore xxx\xxx\xxx.sln(the full path of solution file containing the c++ project and the unit test project)
Then, you can build the project with the command. And I hope the error will disappear.

Visual Studio: copy installation folder and setup it up to be auto-detected by Qt Creator

I wiped out an old Windows 10 and replaced it with a new Windows 10 by ISO image.
Before wiping out, I copied the folder of Microsoft Visual Studio 2017 Community Edition on old Windows to an external hard disk:
xcopy /E "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio" D:\
Now after reinstalling Windows 10, I copied the VS 2017 folder from external the hard disk to the C:\Program Files (x86)\ folder of new operating system.
I did so to avoid having to download VS 2017 again on new OS.
The problem is other software, like Qt Creator, cannot auto-detect the VS C/C++ compilers. I guess that's because the VS 2017 isn't added to path.
The questions are:
What path should I add to system path in order to VS 2017 to be auto-detected by other software like Qt Creator?
Is there any script which I can run to automatically integrate the VS 2017 to the rest of the operating system.
To answer the questions in your issue:
Copying the content of C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio folder is not a recommended way to install VS.
(The complete installation will not only set the Environment variables but also set the related registry keys and values. A simple copy may break this process)
So we always suggest that users install the VS by vs-installer or offline installation package. (Same like what Zlatomir suggests.)
To your actual requirements:
It seems you're just trying to use VC++ compiler in QT Creator instead of developing QT projects in Visual Studio. So build tools for VS package is enough for you.
See this related issue, if we download Build Tools for VS package with corresponding C++ workload, then we can get the compiler the QT needs. There's no need to install the VS IDE for this situation.
And if we need C++ compiler from VS2017, download the Build Tools for VS2017, if we need C++ compiler from VS2015, download the Build Tools for VS2015 Update3. Link of old version about VS Tools see here.
Update:
From the the link older downloads we can see:
Choose the download button according to which version we need. We can find both VS2017 build tools package and VS2015's there.
Usually programs on Windows don't work after you just copy the installation folder.
So right now there is little you can do to fix it, even if you partially fix, you have no way to know if something else will be broken in the future.
So the recommended solution is to download the installer again and create an offline installer for the next time this happens, you can do that by running the online installer with the following parameters: vs_community.exe --layout c:\vslayout --lang en-US (replace vs_community.exe with the actual name of the online installer file, or rename it), for more options, that might require a smaller download (example if you only need native and don't need .net) check the documentation here for the full set of options you have.

NServiceBus.Host.exe is missing while installing NServiceBus.Host on aspnetcore 2 in visual studio 2017

I am trying to run NServiceBus with AspNetCore2 on visual studio 2017. While I install NServiceBus(Version 7.0.0-beta0001) and NServiceBus.Host(Version 8.0.0-beta0001) through nuget, it says package installed successfully.
However, when i try to check installed dll's and exe files of NServiceBus within bin/debug folder, it's not there.
Quick observations i made are, NServiceBus (version 7.0...) is installed correctly whereas NServiceBus.Host (version 8.0....) is showing a warning message under nuget folder in visual studio:
Package 'NServiceBus.Host 8.0.0-beta0001' was restored using '.NETFramework,Version=v4.6.1' instead of the project target framework '.NETCoreApp,Version=v2.0'. This package may not be fully compatible with your project.
Please help me to resolve this issue or point me to correct question if it's already been answered (which i could not find in SO)
NServiceBus.Host is being phased out for the reasons specified here. Long story short, in .NET Core it does not add much of a value and has more cons.
You can however, still run the NServiceBus process in a console app. Have a look at the self-hosting sample here.

Missing vc_runtimeminimum_x86.msi and installation won't work

I'm currently going through the installation process for Visual Studio 2017 Community Edition to use with C++. Halfway through installation, I get an error stating
"The feature you are trying to use is on a network resource that is unavailable. Click OK to try again, or enter an alternate path to a folder containing the installation package 'vc_runtimeMinimum_x86.msi' in the box below."
If I hit cancel, the procedure continues and at the end tells me that the setup has failed. It gives me the error logs attached at the bottom of this post.
Also, I have uploaded the complete logs on the Microsoft Visual Studio developer help forum here.
I'd like to be able to solve this problem without having to do a re-installation of the OS. So far, I've tried /sfc scannow, repairing through the Visual Studio Installer, and reinstalling the C++ redistributables, but all too no avail.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
The product failed to install the listed workloads and components due to one or more package failures. Incomplete workloads Desktop development with C++
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.NativeDesktop,version=15.0.26403.0)
Universal Windows Platform development
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.Universal,version=15.0.26403.0)
Visual Studio extension development
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.VisualStudioExtension,version=15.0.26208.0)
Incomplete components C# and Visual Basic
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.Roslyn.LanguageServices,version=15.0.26208.0)
C++ profiling tools
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VC.DiagnosticTools,version=15.0.26208.0)
Graphics debugger and GPU profiler for DirectX
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.Graphics.Tools,version=15.0.26208.0)
JavaScript and TypeScript language support
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.JavaScript.TypeScript,version=15.0.26208.0)
Profiling tools
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.DiagnosticTools,version=15.0.26208.0)
Static analysis tools
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.Static.Analysis.Tools,version=15.0.26208.0)
Universal Windows Platform tools
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.UWP.Support,version=15.0.26403.0)
Universal Windows Platform tools for Cordova
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.ComponentGroup.UWP.Cordova,version=15.0.26403.0)
Universal Windows Platform tools for Xamarin
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.ComponentGroup.UWP.Xamarin,version=15.0.26403.0)
VC++ 2017 v141 toolset (x86,x64)
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VC.Tools.x86.x64,version=15.0.26208.0)
Visual Studio extension development prerequisites
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.ComponentGroup.VisualStudioExtension.Prerequisites,version=15.0.26208.0)
Visual Studio SDK
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VSSDK,version=15.0.26208.0) You can search for solutions using the information below, modify your selections for the above workloads and components and retry the installation, or remove the product from your machine. Following is a collection of individual package failures that led to the incomplete workloads and components above. To search for existing reports of these specific problems, please copy and paste the URL from each package failure into a web browser. If the issue has already been reported, you can find solutions or workarounds there. If the issue has not been reported, you can create a new issue where other people will be able to find solutions or workarounds. Package
'Microsoft.VisualCpp.Redist.14,version=14.10.25008,chip=x86' failed to install. Search URL: https://aka.ms/VSSetupErrorReports?q=PackageId=Microsoft.VisualCpp.Redist.14;PackageAction=Install;ReturnCode=1603 Impacted workloads Desktop development with C++
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.NativeDesktop,version=15.0.26403.0)
Universal Windows Platform development
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.Universal,version=15.0.26403.0)
Visual Studio extension development
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.VisualStudioExtension,version=15.0.26208.0)
Impacted components C# and Visual Basic
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.Roslyn.LanguageServices,version=15.0.26208.0)
C++ profiling tools
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VC.DiagnosticTools,version=15.0.26208.0)
Graphics debugger and GPU profiler for DirectX
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.Graphics.Tools,version=15.0.26208.0)
JavaScript and TypeScript language support
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.JavaScript.TypeScript,version=15.0.26208.0)
Profiling tools
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.DiagnosticTools,version=15.0.26208.0)
Static analysis tools
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.Static.Analysis.Tools,version=15.0.26208.0)
Universal Windows Platform tools
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.UWP.Support,version=15.0.26403.0)
Universal Windows Platform tools for Cordova
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.ComponentGroup.UWP.Cordova,version=15.0.26403.0)
Universal Windows Platform tools for Xamarin
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.ComponentGroup.UWP.Xamarin,version=15.0.26403.0)
VC++ 2017 v141 toolset (x86,x64)
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VC.Tools.x86.x64,version=15.0.26208.0)
Visual Studio extension development prerequisites
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.ComponentGroup.VisualStudioExtension.Prerequisites,version=15.0.26208.0)
Visual Studio SDK
(Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VSSDK,version=15.0.26208.0) Log
C:\Users\Owner\AppData\Local\Temp\dd_setup_20170412231725_117_Microsoft.VisualCpp.Redist.14.log
Details Command executed:
"C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\VisualStudio\Packages\Microsoft.VisualCpp.Redist.14,version=14.10.25008,chip=x86\VC_redist.x86.exe" /q /norestart /log "C:\Users\Owner\AppData\Local\Temp\dd_setup_20170412231725_117_Microsoft.VisualCpp.Redist.14.log"
Return code: 1603 Return code details: Fatal error during installation.
I ran into this problem as well on a recent build of Win 10 + trying to install latest VS Community. When I entered this state, things appeared to be super broken. Here's the sequence of events that I took which finally worked:
In the installed, select to "download all packages and then install"
Attempt installation
See the popup
With the popup still up, go here: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/17588/fix-problems-that-block-programs-from-being-installed-or-removed and download the tool
Open the tool and then select "Uninstall" on the page it says "do you need help installing or uninstalling"
On the next page with the list, select Microsoft Visual C++ 2015 (whatever) and hit next to "Try Uninstall"
Repeat steps 5 - 6 until I didn't see any "Microsoft Visual C++ 2015" left in the list. Note that the popup is still showing.
Close the popup
Pause the install and Resume it.
I didn't see the pop up again and it appears to have installed correctly.
If you're coming here a year after the solution was marked without any resolution, try that and see if it works around the issue for you.
Here are some other things I tried which didn't work for me. If the above didn't work for you, maybe try some of the following which I collected through some searching:
Going to C:\Program Data\Package Cache, searching for the msi package, giving the installer the literal path to what I found. Installer complains "wrong version"
Using https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/17588/fix-problems-that-block-programs-from-being-installed-or-removed after the install failed and then repairing (same error).
Uninstalling VS 2015 packages after install failed and repairing (same error).
Ignoring the error. When I did this, VS didn't have any templates installed and devenv /installvstemplates didn't solve this.
Go to Control Panel--Programs and Features, uninstall the Visual C++ 2015 Redistribute items.
After that, run the tool: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/17588/fix-problems-that-block-programs-from-being-installed-or-removed. Re-run the VS 2017 installer as administrator, then click the icon besides 'Launch' and choose 'Repair' to repair the VS 2017.
This tool from Microsoft (which was mentioned by others here) worked for me, after I had been searching for an answer for days:
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/17588/windows-fix-problems-that-block-programs-being-installed-or-removed
You have to choose the "I have problems uninstalling" and search for your "C++"-components (in your case the 2017 ones).
There are usually the "Minimum runtime" and the "Additional runtime"-components. After I've uninstalled both of them with this tool, I could just install a programm that uses these runtimes (for example Visual Studio) and it would download and install the missing features, after that, everything workes perfect for me.
Try installing all the things from here: https://support.microsoft.com/ms-my/help/2977003/the-latest-supported-visual-c-downloads
Not sure if you just have to install the x86 version or all of them. recommend that you install all of them but remember to uninstall the ones which you already have.
for me was simple to fix this problem.
Uninstall all visual c++ with Revo Uninstaller Pro
Use MPVCI tool. link(https://www.majorgeeks.com/files/details/multipack_visual_c_installer.html)
enjoy it. for me it works.

MSVCP100D.dll missing

When I try to debug my C++ application I get the error
The program can't start because MSVCP100D.dll is missing from your
computer. Try reinstalling the program to fix this problem.
I found someone with a similar problem here: Remote debugging C++ on the Windows Server 2008 platform with VS2010; MSVCP100D.dll missing however the solution given there doesn't seem to show up when I go to the solution properties.
Would reinstalling Visual Studio fix this problem?
Usually you don't want MSVCP100D.dll on your system. It's for debugging purposes only. If you get this error for your release build you must make sure that you didn't accidently add a 'Debug'-tagged Project Output to your setup project.
If you really need to debug your software on a remote machine, I suggest you do the following:
Create a new Setup project called 'CRTDebug100Setup' and add the following Merge Modules (found under C:\Program Files\Common Files\Merge Modules):
Microsoft_VC90_DebugCRT_x86.msm
policy_9_0_Microsoft_VC90_DebugCRT_x86.msm
Build, and deploy on your computer to be debugged!
Reinstalling Visual Studio fixed the problem.
This can also occur if Generate Debug info is not set to No
Configuration Properties -> Linker -> Debugging -> Generate Debug info
Followup on l33t's answer above (tried to revise it but it did not seem to appear).
Added later by gpicher 10 Jan 2012: I believe those .msm packages would be for a 9.x version of the DLL in question, not a 10.x version. I resolved a similar problem I had by making a setup project with Visual Studio 2010 installed on a 64 bit Windows installation, using the merge module Microsoft_VC100_DebugCRT_x86.msm in the folder C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Merge Modules. There's a similar x64 version of the .msm if the application showing the error dialog is a 64 bit application. In this case a third party was providing me a debug build of their application in order to develop and test new plugin code against, so I couldn't change build settings, and wanted the debug functionality.
Find the Visual Studio 2010 install iso file.
Extract cab44.cab file from the ISO.
Then extract file "F_REDIST_DLL_APPLOCAL_msvcp100d_x86" from the .cab file using 7z.
Rename the file to msvcp100d.dll.
For x64 version. The cab file name is cab26.cab and the file name is F_REDIST_DLL_APPLOCAL_msvcp100d_x64.
For similar issue such missing msvcr*d.dll for another visual studio version. Here is the way I used to find the answer:
Find the Visual Studio ISO.
Extract all the .cab file.
7z.exe t *.cab > filelist.txt
gvim filelist.txt
searching for the interested file name. Hope this helps.