Is there a way to write an application that can connect to a running instance of Visual Studio and issue commands to it? For example, could I write a WPF app with a button that, when clicked, issues a "Build.BuildSolution" command to an already-open instance of Visual Studio, causing it to start a build?
I'm sure I could use SendKeys to send Ctrl+Shift+B, but I want to know if there's a way to write to an actual API to automate Visual Studio, and invoke commands by name.
Here's a C# program that connects to a running Visual Studio and issues a Build command. The DTE.9
part means "Visual Studio 2008" - use DTE.8
for VS 2005, or DTE.10
for VS 2010.
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
using EnvDTE80;
namespace SORemoteBuild
{
class Program
{
[STAThread]
static void Main(string[] args)
{
// Get an instance of the currently running Visual Studio IDE.
EnvDTE80.DTE2 dte2;
dte2 = (EnvDTE80.DTE2)System.Runtime.InteropServices.Marshal.
GetActiveObject("VisualStudio.DTE.9.0");
dte2.Solution.SolutionBuild.Build(true);
}
}
public class MessageFilter : IOleMessageFilter
{
// ... Continues at http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms228772.aspx
(The nonsense with STAThread and MessageFilter is "due to threading contention issues between external multi-threaded applications and Visual Studio", whatever that means. Pasting in the code from http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms228772.aspx makes it work.)
If you are just trying to automate builds/packaging of your apps, you should look into MSBuild -- it is Microsoft's build engine that lets you script automation of most of the functions of Visual Studio.