I am experiencing a strange issue with VS2010. We use TFS to build our API dlls and we used to reference them in our projects usign a mapped network drive that was fully trusted. We have been working like that for at least two years and everything worked perfectly.
Today, I converted a webapp to vs2010 and when I compile it in Release, it's giving me:
SGEN : error : Could not load file or assembly 'file:///L:\Api\Release API_20100521.1\Release\CS.API.Exceptions.dll' or one of its dependencies. Operation is not supported. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80131515)
The strange thing is that it's working when it's under the Debug profile...
I tried adding the
<runtime>
<loadFromRemoteSources enabled="true" />
</runtime>
into app.config and still no luck (See http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en/msbuild/thread/d12f6301-85bf-4b9e-8e34-a06398a60df0 and http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd409252(VS.100).aspx)
I am pretty sure that this issue is from visual studio or msbuild, as our code won't run from a network share when in prod because all the referenced dll's are copied into the bin folder.
If anyone has an solution (or just an idea for a search path) please let me know !
Edit : It turns out that it was working in Debug mode because generation of serialisation assemblies was turned Off. As the title say, it's really a SGEN problem since it is this utility that says that the path is not trusted...
I had the same error and found my DLL was "blocked". Open up the DLL in explorer, right click -> properties -> press 'Unblock'.
http://cantgrokwontgrok.blogspot.com/2009/10/visual-studio-unknown-build-error.html
I was able to fix this error by finding the assembly DLL in Windows Explorer, right clicking, choosing Properties, and then pressing the "unblock" button. The DLL has a stream that is marking it as an external file - and by clicking unblock you remove that designation.
Adding the snippet below to the app.config file worked in my case. I'm Running Windows XP, with VS2010 service pack 1.
For those of you running a 64bit version of the TFS build service, I had to create the config file in the following path:
And the file contents:
I just had the same/similar issue on a TFS build server where a build was referencing dll's from a network share.
The problems is that the CLR v4 security policy model has changed since previous versions and are not sandboxing assemblies as before.
To fix your issue just find the location of sgen.exe and create a sgen.exe.config in the same folder with following contents:
sgen.exe is usually at
You can read about some of the changes around CAS policies in .NET 4.0 in this blogpost: Link
Just as an FYI if you are running Windows 7 the sgen.exe file can be found at:
C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.0A\Bin\NETFX 4.0 Tools
I had to create a sgen.exe.config and place it there and then this problem went away.