I'm writing a tool to report information about .NET applications deployed across environments and regions within my client's systems.
I'd like to read the values of assembly attributes in these assemblies.
This can be achieved using Assembly.ReflectionOnlyLoad
, however even this approach keeps the assembly loaded. The issue here is that I cannot load two assemblies that have the same name from different paths, so naturally I can't compare the same application deployed in different systems.
At this point I'm assuming the solution will involve using temporary AppDomain
s.
Can someone detail how to load an assembly into another AppDomain
, read the attributes from it and then unload the AppDomain
?
This needs to work for assemblies on the file system as well as those at URL addresses.
From the MSDN documentation of System.Reflection.Assembly.ReflectionOnlyLoad (String) :
The reflection-only context is no
different from other contexts.
Assemblies that are loaded into the
context can be unloaded only by
unloading the application domain.
So, I am afraid the only way to unload an assembly is unloading the application domain.
To create a new AppDomain and load assemblies into it:
public void TempLoadAssembly()
{
AppDomain tempDomain = AppDomain.CreateDomain("TemporaryAppDomain");
tempDomain.DoCallBack(LoaderCallback);
AppDomain.Unload(tempDomain);
}
private void LoaderCallback()
{
Assembly.ReflectionOnlyLoad("YourAssembly");
// Do your stuff here
}
Whilst not really about unloading assemblies, if you're just trying to get the version number of a file you can use System.Diagnostics.FileVersionInfo
.
var info = FileVersionInfo.GetVersionInfo(path);
FileVersionInfo
has the following properties:
public string Comments { get; }
public string CompanyName { get; }
public int FileBuildPart { get; }
public string FileDescription { get; }
public int FileMajorPart { get; }
public int FileMinorPart { get; }
public string FileName { get; }
public int FilePrivatePart { get; }
public string FileVersion { get; }
public string InternalName { get; }
public bool IsDebug { get; }
public bool IsPatched { get; }
public bool IsPreRelease { get; }
public bool IsPrivateBuild { get; }
public bool IsSpecialBuild { get; }
public string Language { get; }
public string LegalCopyright { get; }
public string LegalTrademarks { get; }
public string OriginalFilename { get; }
public string PrivateBuild { get; }
public int ProductBuildPart { get; }
public int ProductMajorPart { get; }
public int ProductMinorPart { get; }
public string ProductName { get; }
public int ProductPrivatePart { get; }
public string ProductVersion { get; }
public string SpecialBuild { get; }
You can create an instance in the new AppDomain and execute your code in that instance.
var settings = new AppDomainSetup
{
ApplicationBase = AppDomain.CurrentDomain.BaseDirectory,
};
var childDomain = AppDomain.CreateDomain(Guid.NewGuid().ToString(), null, settings);
var handle = Activator.CreateInstance(childDomain,
typeof(ReferenceLoader).Assembly.FullName,
typeof(ReferenceLoader).FullName,
false, BindingFlags.NonPublic | BindingFlags.Public | BindingFlags.Instance, null, null, CultureInfo.CurrentCulture, new object[0]);
var loader = (ReferenceLoader)handle.Unwrap();
//This operation is executed in the new AppDomain
var paths = loader.LoadReferences(assemblyPath);
AppDomain.Unload(childDomain);
Here is the ReferenceLoader
public class ReferenceLoader : MarshalByRefObject
{
public string[] LoadReferences(string assemblyPath)
{
var assembly = Assembly.ReflectionOnlyLoadFrom(assemblyPath);
var paths = assembly.GetReferencedAssemblies().Select(x => x.FullName).ToArray();
return paths;
}
}
You can try to use Unmanaged Metadata API, which is COM and can easily be used from .NET application with some kind of wrapper.
You have to use application domains, there's no other way to unload an assembly. Basically you have to use code like this:
AppDomain tempDomain = AppDomain.CreateDomain("Temp Domain");
tempDomain.Load(assembly);
AppDomain.Unload(tempDomain);