I am running .net core 1.1 and nuget 3.5.
Here is my nuspec:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<package >
<metadata>
<id>ClassLibrary1</id>
<version>1.0.0.4</version>
<title>Class Library Test Content</title>
<authors>name</authors>
<owners>name</owners>
<requireLicenseAcceptance>false</requireLicenseAcceptance>
<description>package to test config file transfer</description>
<copyright>Copyright 2017</copyright>
<tags>TagUno TagDos</tags>
<contentFiles>
<files include="appsettings.json" buildAction="Content" copyToOutput="true" />
</contentFiles>
</metadata>
<files>
<file src="bin\Debug\net462\classlibrary1.dll" target="lib\net462\classlibrary1.dll" />
<file src="appsettings.json" target="content\net462\appsettings.json" />
</files>
</package>
As we can see, the appsettings.json file is located in the content folder in the nuget package.
However, when I install the package to my project, the appsettings.json file is not copied to the project root.
What am I missing? Or is this done differently in .net core?
The
content
subdirectory is only used forpackages.config
projects.Projects using the
PackageReference
style of NuGet references use thecontentFiles
section instead which allows to specify the build action to use. Those files aren't copied to the project, but are included as items in the project and optionally set to copy to the consuming project's build output:See the
contentFiles
documentation for more detail.Note that those files aren't copied to the project but included logically. Only
packages.config
projects support this since there was no other way to contribute files - the documentation also states that these files should have been considered immutable anyway.