Assembly binding and redirect - c#

I have an EXE that reference a DLL - for this example I'll call it TestDLL.dll.
The EXE is written in C# and the DLL is written in VB .Net.
I created a demo assembly version of the DLL - for example - TestDLL.dll version 1.0.0.0.
I want to compile the EXE with a reference to the demo version DLL (1.0.0.0). Afterwards - I want the EXE to use the same DLL, but the one I'll put in the GAC, of any version.
In order to do that, I set the "Copy Local" property of the DLL's reference to FALSE.
My goal is for example - after compiling, I'll put in the GAC TestDLL.dll with assembly version 2.1.6.0, and the EXE will find it using the assembly redirect binding. For that, I used a config file. I used this link to create it:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/7wd6ex19(v=vs.71).aspx
So my config file looks about like this:
<configuration>
<runtime>
<assemblyBinding xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1">
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="myAssembly"
publicKeyToken="32ab4ba45e0a69a1"
culture="en-us" />
<!-- Assembly versions can be redirected in application, publisher policy, or machine configuration files. -->
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="1.0.0.0"
newVersion="2.1.6.0"/>
</dependentAssembly>
</assemblyBinding>
</runtime>
</configuration>
The problem is that after doing all that, I run the EXE and when accessing the dll, I get the famous error:
System.IO.FileNotFoundException: Could not load file or assembly 'TestDLL, Version=1.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=9d8162944bd6fdc7' or one of its dependencies. The system cannot find the file specified.
File name: 'TestDLL, Version=1.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=9d8162944bd6fdc7'
Meaning, the EXE can't find the original DLL I referenced to.
I know that I can just "reference" the GAC or use reflection, but I don't want to - since this EXE is supposed to work only this way.
Does anyone know what's the problem and how to fix it?
Thanks

Make sure that you have set the proper publicKeyToken. In the code you have shown you are using publicKeyToken="32ab4ba45e0a69a1" which is the public key token from the MSDN link. This obviously is not the public key token of your assembly. For this to work you need to have both assemblies (1.0.0.0 and 2.1.6.0) signed with the same key. To extract the public key token you could use the sn.exe tool or looked at the exception stack trace you are getting (it is telling you that publicKeyToken="9d8162944bd6fdc7"):
sn.exe -Tp myassembly.dll
But if the assembly that the executable was compiled against was not signed with the same key this won't work.
Also I see that you have set the culture="en-us" but does your assembly use this culture? You could also try culture="Neutral".
Finally make sure that you have deployed the proper version of the assembly into the GAC.

Related

Function failed when called from other project due to assembly file c# [duplicate]

I am trying to run some unit tests in a C# Windows Forms application (Visual Studio 2005), and I get the following error:
System.IO.FileLoadException: Could not load file or assembly 'Utility, Version=1.2.0.200, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=764d581291d764f7' or one of its dependencies. The located assembly's manifest definition does not match the assembly reference. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80131040)**
at x.Foo.FooGO()
at x.Foo.Foo2(String groupName_) in Foo.cs:line 123
at x.Foo.UnitTests.FooTests.TestFoo() in FooTests.cs:line 98**
System.IO.FileLoadException: Could not load file or assembly 'Utility, Version=1.2.0.203, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=764d581291d764f7' or one of its dependencies. The located assembly's manifest definition does not match the assembly reference. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80131040)
I look in my references, and I only have a reference to Utility version 1.2.0.203 (the other one is old).
Any suggestions on how I figure out what is trying to reference this old version of this DLL file?
Besides, I don't think I even have this old assembly on my hard drive.
Is there any tool to search for this old versioned assembly?
The .NET Assembly loader:
is unable to find 1.2.0.203
but did find a 1.2.0.200
This assembly does not match what was requested and therefore you get this error.
In simple words, it can't find the assembly that was referenced. Make sure it can find the right assembly by putting it in the GAC or in the application path.
run below command to add the assembly dll file to GAC:
gacutil /i "path/to/my.dll"
Also see https://learn.microsoft.com/archive/blogs/junfeng/the-located-assemblys-manifest-definition-with-name-xxx-dll-does-not-match-the-assembly-reference.
You can do a couple of things to troubleshoot this issue. First, use Windows file search to search your hard drive for your assembly (.dll). Once you have a list of results, do View->Choose Details... and then check "File Version". This will display the version number in the list of results, so you can see where the old version might be coming from.
Also, like Lars said, check your GAC to see what version is listed there. This Microsoft article states that assemblies found in the GAC are not copied locally during a build, so you might need to remove the old version before doing a rebuild all. (See my answer to this question for notes on creating a batch file to do this for you)
If you still can't figure out where the old version is coming from, you can use the fuslogvw.exe application that ships with Visual Studio to get more information about the binding failures. Microsoft has information about this tool here. Note that you'll have to enable logging by setting the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Fusion\EnableLog registry key to 1.
I just ran into this problem myself, and I found that the issue was something different than what the others have run into.
I had two DLLs that my main project was referencing: CompanyClasses.dll and CompanyControls.dll. I was getting a run-time error saying:
Could not load file or assembly
'CompanyClasses, Version=1.4.1.0,
Culture=neutral,
PublicKeyToken=045746ba8544160c' or
one of its dependencies. The located
assembly's manifest definition does
not match the assembly reference
Trouble was, I didn't have any CompanyClasses.dll files on my system with a version number of 1.4.1. None in the GAC, none in the app folders...none anywhere. I searched my entire hard drive. All the CompanyClasses.dll files I had were 1.4.2.
The real problem, I found, was that CompanyControls.dll referenced version 1.4.1 of CompanyClasses.dll. I just recompiled CompanyControls.dll (after having it reference CompanyClasses.dll 1.4.2) and this error went away for me.
The following redirects any assembly version to version 3.1.0.0. We have a script that will always update this reference in the App.config so we never have to deal with this issue again.
Through reflection you can get the assembly publicKeyToken and generate this block from the .dll file itself.
<assemblyBinding xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1">
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="Castle.Core" publicKeyToken="407dd0808d44fbdc" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-65535.65535.65535.65535" newVersion="3.1.0.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
</assemblyBinding>
Note that without an XML namespace attribute (xmlns) this will not work.
If you are using Visual Studio, try "clean solution" and then rebuild your project.
I am going to blow everyone's mind right now . . .
Delete all the <assemblyBinding> references from your .config file, and then run this command from the NuGet Package Manager console:
Get-Project -All | Add-BindingRedirect
The other answers wouldn't work for me. If you don't care about the version and you just want your app to run then right click on the reference and set 'specific version' to false...This worked for me.
In my case, this error occurred while running an ASP.NET application.
The solution was to:
Delete the obj and bin folders in the project folder
Clean didn't work, rebuild didn't work, all references were fine, but it wasn't writing one of the libraries. After deleting those directories, everything worked perfectly.
I added a NuGet package, only to realize a black-box portion of my application was referencing an older version of the library.
I removed the package and referenced the older version's static DLL file, but the web.config file was never updated from:
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="Newtonsoft.Json" publicKeyToken="30ad4fe6b2a6aeed" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.5.0.0" newVersion="6.0.0.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
to what it should have reverted to when I uninstalled the package:
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="Newtonsoft.Json" publicKeyToken="30ad4fe6b2a6aeed" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.0.0.0" newVersion="4.5.0.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
I just ran across this issue and the problem was I had an old copy of the .dll in my application debug directory. You might want to also check there (instead of the GAC) to see if you see it.
In my case it was an old version of the DLL in C:\WINDOWS\Microsoft.NET\Framework\~\Temporary ASP.NET Files\ directory. You can either delete or replace the old version, or you can remove and add back the reference to the DLL in your project. Basically, either way will create a new pointer to the temporary ASP.NET Files.
Is possible you have a wrong nugget versions in assemblyBinding try:
Remove all assembly binding content in web.config / app.config:
<assemblyBinding xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1">
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.Abstractions" publicKeyToken="adb9793829ddae60" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-3.1.3.0" newVersion="3.1.3.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection" publicKeyToken="adb9793829ddae60" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-3.1.3.0" newVersion="3.1.3.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="System.ComponentModel.Annotations" publicKeyToken="b03f5f7f11d50a3a" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.2.1.0" newVersion="4.2.1.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
</assemblyBinding>
Type in Package Manager Console: Add-BindingRedirect
All necessary binding redirects are generated
Run your application and see if it works properly. If not, add any missing binding redirects that the package console missed.
For us, the problem was caused by something else. The license file for the DevExpress components included two lines, one for an old version of the components that was not installed on this particular computer. Removing the older version from the license file solved the issue.
The annoying part is that the error message gave no indication to what reference was causing the problems.
I would like to just add that I was creating a basic ASP.NET MVC 4 project and added DotNetOpenAuth.AspNet via NuGet. This resulted in the same error after I referenced a mismatching DLL file for Microsoft.Web.WebPages.OAuth.
To fix it I did a Update-Package and cleaned the solution for a full rebuild.
That worked for me and is kind of a lazy way, but time is money:-P
This exact same error is thrown if you try to late bind using reflection, if the assembly you are binding to gets strong-named or has its public-key token changed. The error is the same even though there is not actually any assembly found with the specified public key token.
You need to add the correct public key token (you can get it using sn -T on the dll) to resolve the error. Hope this helps.
I got this error while building on Team Foundation Server's build-service. It turned out I had multiple projects in my solution using different versions of the same library added with NuGet. I removed all old versions with NuGet and added the new one as reference for all.
Team Foundation Server puts all DLL files in one directory, and there can only be one DLL file of a certain name at a time of course.
My issue was copying source code to a new machine without pulling over any of the referenced assemblies.
Nothing that I did fixed the error, so in haste, I deleted the BIN directory altogether. Rebuilt my source code, and it worked from then on out.
Mine was a very similar situation to the post by Nathan Bedford but with a slight twist. My project too referenced the changed dll in two ways. 1) Directly and 2) Indirectly by referencing a component (class library) that itself had a reference to the changed dll. Now my Visual studio project for the component(2) referenced the correct version of the changed dll. However the version number of the compnent itself was NOT changed. And as a result the install of the new version of the project failed to replace that component on the client machine.
End result: Direct reference (1) and Indirect reference(2) were pointing to different versions of the changed dll at the client machine. On my dev machine it worked fine.
Resolution: Remove application; Delete all the DLLS from application folder; Re-install.Simple as that in my case.
After trying many of the above solutions with no fix, it came down to making sure 'Auto-generate binding redirects' was turned on within your application in Visual Studio.
More information on enabling automatic binding redirection can be found here: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/framework/configure-apps/how-to-enable-and-disable-automatic-binding-redirection
I'll let someone benefit from my shear stupidity. I have some dependencies to a completely separate application (let's call this App1). The dll's from that App1 are pulled into my new application (App2). Any time I do updates in APP1, I have to create new dll's and copy them into App2. Well. . .I got tired of copying and pasting between 2 different App1 versions, so I simply added a 'NEW_' prefix to the dll's.
Well. . . I'm guessing that the build process scans the /bin folder and when it matches something up incorrectly, it barfs with the same error message as noted above. I deleted my "new_" versions and it built just dandy.
My app.config contains a
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="1.0.0.0" newVersion="2.0.11.0"/>
for npgsql. Somehow on the user's machine, my app.exe.config went missing. I am not sure if it was a silly user, installer glitch, or wacked out anti-virus yet. Replacing the file solved the issue.
I just found another reason why to get this error. I cleaned my GAC from all versions of a specific library and built my project with reference to specific version deployed together with the executable. When I run the project I got this exception searching for a newer version of the library.
The reason was publisher policy. When I uninstalled library's versions from GAC I forgot to uninstall publisher policy assemblies as well so instead of using my locally deployed assembly the assembly loader found publisher policy in GAC which told it to search for a newer version.
To me the code coverage configuration in the "Local.testtesttings" file "caused" the problem. I forgot to update the files that were referenced there.
Just deleting contents of your project's bin folder and rebuild the solution solved my problem.
I faced the same problem while running my unit testcases.
The error clearly states the problem is: when we try to load assembly, the .NET assembly loader tries to load its referred assemblies based on its manifest data (referred assembly name, public key token, version).
To check manifest data:
Open the Visual Studio command prompt,
Type 'ildasm' and drag the required assembly to the ILDASM window and open MANIFEST view. Sometimes MANIFEST contains one assembly with two versions old version as well as new version(like Utility, Version=1.2.0.200 and Utility, Version=1.2.0.203). In reality, the referred assembly is Utility, Version=1.2.0.203(new version), but since the manifest contains even Utility, Version=1.2.0.200(old version), .NET assembly loader tries to find out this versioned DLL file, fails to find and so throws exception.
To solve this, just drag each of the project dependent assemblies to the ILDASM window separately and check which dependent assembly holds the manifest data with the old assembly version. Just rebuild this dependent assembly and refer it back to your project.
A general answer to this kind of issue is to use binding redirects as in other answers. However, that's only part of the problem - you need to know the correct version of the assembly file that you're using. Windows properties is not always accurate and nuget is also not always accurate.
The only way to get correct version info is to analyse the file itself. One useful tool is dotPeek. The assembly name listed in dotPeek is always accurate in my experience.
So for example, the correct binding for this file is the following:
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="System.ComponentModel.Annotations" publicKeyToken="b03f5f7f11d50a3a" culture="neutral"/>
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.2.1.0" newVersion="4.2.1.0"/>
</dependentAssembly>
Windows explorer says the file is 4.6.26515.06, nuget says its a 5.0.0.0 file. dotPeek says it is 4.2.1.0 and that is the version that works correctly in our software. Also note that the public key and culture are important and dotPeek also show this information.
Here's my method of fixing this issue.
From the exception message, get the name of the "problem" library and the "expected" version number.
Find all copies of that .dll in your solution, right-click on them, and check which version of the .dll it is.
Okay, so in this example, my .dll is definitely 2.0.5022.0 (so the Exception version number is wrong).
Search for the version number which was shown in the Exception message in all of the .csproj files in your solution. Replace this version number with the actual number from the dll.
So, in this example, I would replace this...
<Reference Include="DocumentFormat.OpenXml, Version=2.5.5631.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=31bf3856ad364e35, processorArchitecture=MSIL" />
... with this...
<Reference Include="DocumentFormat.OpenXml, Version=2.0.5022.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=31bf3856ad364e35, processorArchitecture=MSIL" />
Job done !
The question has already an answer, but if the problem has occurred by NuGet package in different versions in the same solution, you can try the following.
Open NuGet Package Manager, as you see my service project version is different than others.
Then update projects that contain an old version of your package.
clean and rebuild the solution might not replace all the dll's from the output directory.
what i'll suggest is try renaming the folder from "bin" to "oldbin" or "obj" to "oldobj"
and then try build your silution again.
incase if you are using any third party dll's those you will need to copy into newly created "bin" or "obj" folder after successful build.
hope this will work for you.
No solution worked for me. I tried clean project solution, remove bin, update package, downgrade package and so on... After two hours I loaded default App.config from project with assemblies and there I changed wrong reference version from:
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="Microsoft.IdentityModel.Logging" publicKeyToken="31bf3856ad364e35" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-5.5.0.0" newVersion="5.5.0.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
to:
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="Microsoft.IdentityModel.Logging" publicKeyToken="31bf3856ad364e35" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-3.14.0.0" newVersion="5.5.0.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
After this I cleaned project, build it again and it worked. No warning no problem.

System.IO.FileLoadException: 'Could not load file or assembly 'Serilog' [duplicate]

I am trying to run some unit tests in a C# Windows Forms application (Visual Studio 2005), and I get the following error:
System.IO.FileLoadException: Could not load file or assembly 'Utility, Version=1.2.0.200, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=764d581291d764f7' or one of its dependencies. The located assembly's manifest definition does not match the assembly reference. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80131040)**
at x.Foo.FooGO()
at x.Foo.Foo2(String groupName_) in Foo.cs:line 123
at x.Foo.UnitTests.FooTests.TestFoo() in FooTests.cs:line 98**
System.IO.FileLoadException: Could not load file or assembly 'Utility, Version=1.2.0.203, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=764d581291d764f7' or one of its dependencies. The located assembly's manifest definition does not match the assembly reference. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80131040)
I look in my references, and I only have a reference to Utility version 1.2.0.203 (the other one is old).
Any suggestions on how I figure out what is trying to reference this old version of this DLL file?
Besides, I don't think I even have this old assembly on my hard drive.
Is there any tool to search for this old versioned assembly?
The .NET Assembly loader:
is unable to find 1.2.0.203
but did find a 1.2.0.200
This assembly does not match what was requested and therefore you get this error.
In simple words, it can't find the assembly that was referenced. Make sure it can find the right assembly by putting it in the GAC or in the application path.
run below command to add the assembly dll file to GAC:
gacutil /i "path/to/my.dll"
Also see https://learn.microsoft.com/archive/blogs/junfeng/the-located-assemblys-manifest-definition-with-name-xxx-dll-does-not-match-the-assembly-reference.
You can do a couple of things to troubleshoot this issue. First, use Windows file search to search your hard drive for your assembly (.dll). Once you have a list of results, do View->Choose Details... and then check "File Version". This will display the version number in the list of results, so you can see where the old version might be coming from.
Also, like Lars said, check your GAC to see what version is listed there. This Microsoft article states that assemblies found in the GAC are not copied locally during a build, so you might need to remove the old version before doing a rebuild all. (See my answer to this question for notes on creating a batch file to do this for you)
If you still can't figure out where the old version is coming from, you can use the fuslogvw.exe application that ships with Visual Studio to get more information about the binding failures. Microsoft has information about this tool here. Note that you'll have to enable logging by setting the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Fusion\EnableLog registry key to 1.
I just ran into this problem myself, and I found that the issue was something different than what the others have run into.
I had two DLLs that my main project was referencing: CompanyClasses.dll and CompanyControls.dll. I was getting a run-time error saying:
Could not load file or assembly
'CompanyClasses, Version=1.4.1.0,
Culture=neutral,
PublicKeyToken=045746ba8544160c' or
one of its dependencies. The located
assembly's manifest definition does
not match the assembly reference
Trouble was, I didn't have any CompanyClasses.dll files on my system with a version number of 1.4.1. None in the GAC, none in the app folders...none anywhere. I searched my entire hard drive. All the CompanyClasses.dll files I had were 1.4.2.
The real problem, I found, was that CompanyControls.dll referenced version 1.4.1 of CompanyClasses.dll. I just recompiled CompanyControls.dll (after having it reference CompanyClasses.dll 1.4.2) and this error went away for me.
The following redirects any assembly version to version 3.1.0.0. We have a script that will always update this reference in the App.config so we never have to deal with this issue again.
Through reflection you can get the assembly publicKeyToken and generate this block from the .dll file itself.
<assemblyBinding xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1">
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="Castle.Core" publicKeyToken="407dd0808d44fbdc" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-65535.65535.65535.65535" newVersion="3.1.0.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
</assemblyBinding>
Note that without an XML namespace attribute (xmlns) this will not work.
If you are using Visual Studio, try "clean solution" and then rebuild your project.
I am going to blow everyone's mind right now . . .
Delete all the <assemblyBinding> references from your .config file, and then run this command from the NuGet Package Manager console:
Get-Project -All | Add-BindingRedirect
The other answers wouldn't work for me. If you don't care about the version and you just want your app to run then right click on the reference and set 'specific version' to false...This worked for me.
In my case, this error occurred while running an ASP.NET application.
The solution was to:
Delete the obj and bin folders in the project folder
Clean didn't work, rebuild didn't work, all references were fine, but it wasn't writing one of the libraries. After deleting those directories, everything worked perfectly.
I added a NuGet package, only to realize a black-box portion of my application was referencing an older version of the library.
I removed the package and referenced the older version's static DLL file, but the web.config file was never updated from:
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="Newtonsoft.Json" publicKeyToken="30ad4fe6b2a6aeed" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.5.0.0" newVersion="6.0.0.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
to what it should have reverted to when I uninstalled the package:
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="Newtonsoft.Json" publicKeyToken="30ad4fe6b2a6aeed" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.0.0.0" newVersion="4.5.0.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
I just ran across this issue and the problem was I had an old copy of the .dll in my application debug directory. You might want to also check there (instead of the GAC) to see if you see it.
In my case it was an old version of the DLL in C:\WINDOWS\Microsoft.NET\Framework\~\Temporary ASP.NET Files\ directory. You can either delete or replace the old version, or you can remove and add back the reference to the DLL in your project. Basically, either way will create a new pointer to the temporary ASP.NET Files.
Is possible you have a wrong nugget versions in assemblyBinding try:
Remove all assembly binding content in web.config / app.config:
<assemblyBinding xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1">
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.Abstractions" publicKeyToken="adb9793829ddae60" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-3.1.3.0" newVersion="3.1.3.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection" publicKeyToken="adb9793829ddae60" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-3.1.3.0" newVersion="3.1.3.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="System.ComponentModel.Annotations" publicKeyToken="b03f5f7f11d50a3a" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.2.1.0" newVersion="4.2.1.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
</assemblyBinding>
Type in Package Manager Console: Add-BindingRedirect
All necessary binding redirects are generated
Run your application and see if it works properly. If not, add any missing binding redirects that the package console missed.
For us, the problem was caused by something else. The license file for the DevExpress components included two lines, one for an old version of the components that was not installed on this particular computer. Removing the older version from the license file solved the issue.
The annoying part is that the error message gave no indication to what reference was causing the problems.
I would like to just add that I was creating a basic ASP.NET MVC 4 project and added DotNetOpenAuth.AspNet via NuGet. This resulted in the same error after I referenced a mismatching DLL file for Microsoft.Web.WebPages.OAuth.
To fix it I did a Update-Package and cleaned the solution for a full rebuild.
That worked for me and is kind of a lazy way, but time is money:-P
This exact same error is thrown if you try to late bind using reflection, if the assembly you are binding to gets strong-named or has its public-key token changed. The error is the same even though there is not actually any assembly found with the specified public key token.
You need to add the correct public key token (you can get it using sn -T on the dll) to resolve the error. Hope this helps.
I got this error while building on Team Foundation Server's build-service. It turned out I had multiple projects in my solution using different versions of the same library added with NuGet. I removed all old versions with NuGet and added the new one as reference for all.
Team Foundation Server puts all DLL files in one directory, and there can only be one DLL file of a certain name at a time of course.
My issue was copying source code to a new machine without pulling over any of the referenced assemblies.
Nothing that I did fixed the error, so in haste, I deleted the BIN directory altogether. Rebuilt my source code, and it worked from then on out.
Mine was a very similar situation to the post by Nathan Bedford but with a slight twist. My project too referenced the changed dll in two ways. 1) Directly and 2) Indirectly by referencing a component (class library) that itself had a reference to the changed dll. Now my Visual studio project for the component(2) referenced the correct version of the changed dll. However the version number of the compnent itself was NOT changed. And as a result the install of the new version of the project failed to replace that component on the client machine.
End result: Direct reference (1) and Indirect reference(2) were pointing to different versions of the changed dll at the client machine. On my dev machine it worked fine.
Resolution: Remove application; Delete all the DLLS from application folder; Re-install.Simple as that in my case.
After trying many of the above solutions with no fix, it came down to making sure 'Auto-generate binding redirects' was turned on within your application in Visual Studio.
More information on enabling automatic binding redirection can be found here: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/framework/configure-apps/how-to-enable-and-disable-automatic-binding-redirection
I'll let someone benefit from my shear stupidity. I have some dependencies to a completely separate application (let's call this App1). The dll's from that App1 are pulled into my new application (App2). Any time I do updates in APP1, I have to create new dll's and copy them into App2. Well. . .I got tired of copying and pasting between 2 different App1 versions, so I simply added a 'NEW_' prefix to the dll's.
Well. . . I'm guessing that the build process scans the /bin folder and when it matches something up incorrectly, it barfs with the same error message as noted above. I deleted my "new_" versions and it built just dandy.
My app.config contains a
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="1.0.0.0" newVersion="2.0.11.0"/>
for npgsql. Somehow on the user's machine, my app.exe.config went missing. I am not sure if it was a silly user, installer glitch, or wacked out anti-virus yet. Replacing the file solved the issue.
I just found another reason why to get this error. I cleaned my GAC from all versions of a specific library and built my project with reference to specific version deployed together with the executable. When I run the project I got this exception searching for a newer version of the library.
The reason was publisher policy. When I uninstalled library's versions from GAC I forgot to uninstall publisher policy assemblies as well so instead of using my locally deployed assembly the assembly loader found publisher policy in GAC which told it to search for a newer version.
To me the code coverage configuration in the "Local.testtesttings" file "caused" the problem. I forgot to update the files that were referenced there.
Just deleting contents of your project's bin folder and rebuild the solution solved my problem.
I faced the same problem while running my unit testcases.
The error clearly states the problem is: when we try to load assembly, the .NET assembly loader tries to load its referred assemblies based on its manifest data (referred assembly name, public key token, version).
To check manifest data:
Open the Visual Studio command prompt,
Type 'ildasm' and drag the required assembly to the ILDASM window and open MANIFEST view. Sometimes MANIFEST contains one assembly with two versions old version as well as new version(like Utility, Version=1.2.0.200 and Utility, Version=1.2.0.203). In reality, the referred assembly is Utility, Version=1.2.0.203(new version), but since the manifest contains even Utility, Version=1.2.0.200(old version), .NET assembly loader tries to find out this versioned DLL file, fails to find and so throws exception.
To solve this, just drag each of the project dependent assemblies to the ILDASM window separately and check which dependent assembly holds the manifest data with the old assembly version. Just rebuild this dependent assembly and refer it back to your project.
A general answer to this kind of issue is to use binding redirects as in other answers. However, that's only part of the problem - you need to know the correct version of the assembly file that you're using. Windows properties is not always accurate and nuget is also not always accurate.
The only way to get correct version info is to analyse the file itself. One useful tool is dotPeek. The assembly name listed in dotPeek is always accurate in my experience.
So for example, the correct binding for this file is the following:
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="System.ComponentModel.Annotations" publicKeyToken="b03f5f7f11d50a3a" culture="neutral"/>
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.2.1.0" newVersion="4.2.1.0"/>
</dependentAssembly>
Windows explorer says the file is 4.6.26515.06, nuget says its a 5.0.0.0 file. dotPeek says it is 4.2.1.0 and that is the version that works correctly in our software. Also note that the public key and culture are important and dotPeek also show this information.
Here's my method of fixing this issue.
From the exception message, get the name of the "problem" library and the "expected" version number.
Find all copies of that .dll in your solution, right-click on them, and check which version of the .dll it is.
Okay, so in this example, my .dll is definitely 2.0.5022.0 (so the Exception version number is wrong).
Search for the version number which was shown in the Exception message in all of the .csproj files in your solution. Replace this version number with the actual number from the dll.
So, in this example, I would replace this...
<Reference Include="DocumentFormat.OpenXml, Version=2.5.5631.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=31bf3856ad364e35, processorArchitecture=MSIL" />
... with this...
<Reference Include="DocumentFormat.OpenXml, Version=2.0.5022.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=31bf3856ad364e35, processorArchitecture=MSIL" />
Job done !
The question has already an answer, but if the problem has occurred by NuGet package in different versions in the same solution, you can try the following.
Open NuGet Package Manager, as you see my service project version is different than others.
Then update projects that contain an old version of your package.
clean and rebuild the solution might not replace all the dll's from the output directory.
what i'll suggest is try renaming the folder from "bin" to "oldbin" or "obj" to "oldobj"
and then try build your silution again.
incase if you are using any third party dll's those you will need to copy into newly created "bin" or "obj" folder after successful build.
hope this will work for you.
No solution worked for me. I tried clean project solution, remove bin, update package, downgrade package and so on... After two hours I loaded default App.config from project with assemblies and there I changed wrong reference version from:
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="Microsoft.IdentityModel.Logging" publicKeyToken="31bf3856ad364e35" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-5.5.0.0" newVersion="5.5.0.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
to:
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="Microsoft.IdentityModel.Logging" publicKeyToken="31bf3856ad364e35" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-3.14.0.0" newVersion="5.5.0.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
After this I cleaned project, build it again and it worked. No warning no problem.

.NET loaded looking for another version of assembly when generate type's for WCF service

I got this error while trying to add service reference to my ASP.NET web application in Visual Studio 2013. I had reference to Microsoft.Owin.Security version 2.1.0.0 in my project. But I'm discouraged why he looking for 2.0.1.0 version?
Cannot import wsdl:portType Detail: An exception was thrown while
running a WSDL import extension:
System.ServiceModel.Description.DataContractSerializerMessageContractImporter
Error: Could not load file or assembly 'Microsoft.Owin.Security,
Version=2.0.1.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=31bf3856ad364e35' or
one of its dependencies. The system cannot find the file specified.
I did find and post a possible solution on Hélder Gonçalves' version of this question. Hopefully it will allow you to generate the service reference without redirecting to an older version of the Microsoft.Owin.Security assembly. Please let me know if this works for you.
Per Rizier123 suggestion, here's the text from my solution in full:
Had the exact same error verbatim and was able to resolve it by specifying which assemblies to reuse types from.
When adding the service reference, click the Advanced... button in the bottom left corner of the Add Service Reference window. On the Service Reference Settings screen that appears, in the Data Type section, under the Reuse Types in all referenced assemblies: check-box, select the Reuse types in specified reference assemblies radio button then check ONLY the assemblies that contain types used by the service. This should resolve the issue.
The assembly versions that are actually installed and referred varies due to various factors. Anyway you can redirect the binding to your desired versions. Refers this link
In your case, you have to add the following lines to the web.config under configuration
<runtime>
<assemblyBinding xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1">
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="'Microsoft.Owin.Security" publicKeyToken="31bf3856ad364e35" culture="neutral"/>
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-2.1.0.0" newVersion="2.0.1.0"/>
</dependentAssembly>
</assemblyBinding>
</runtime>

Third party components referencing different versions of the same assembly

In my project I'm using two different third party components.
I don't have access to the source code of these components.
Each component is referencing a different version of the same DLL assembly log4net.
In particular component A is referencing log4net version 1.2.9.0, while component B is referencing log4net version 1.2.10.0.
In VS2012, I'm currently adding to the references of my project the two third party components DLLs and I should add as well a reference to log4net.
I've tried the following:
1) Adding a reference to log4net 1.2.9.0: code compiles but at runtime I get exception "Could not load file or assembly [...] log4net, Version= 1.2.10.0 [...]"
2) Adding a reference to log4net 1.2.10.0: code compiles but at runtime I get exception "Could not load file or assembly [...] log4net, Version= 1.2.10.0 [...]"
3) Renaming the log4net.dll version 1.2.9.0 to log4netOld.dll and adding both the version 1.2.9.0 and the 1.2.10.0 to the project references: during compile time I get an expected warning telling that there is namespace clash, and the compiler resolves the types using 1.2.10.0, so at runtime I get the same problem as point 2 -> code compiles but at runtime I get exception "Could not load file or assembly [...] log4net, Version= 1.2.10.0 [...]"
I'm not expert at all of the Reference properties, our current setting for all references is:
1) alias: global
2) copy local: true
3) embed interop types: false
Any idea about how can I solve the problem ?
You should reference 1.2.10 in your solution and add a binding redirect in the app.config to point 1.2.9 to 1.2.10 - something like this:
<runtime>
<assemblyBinding xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1">
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="log4net" publicKeyToken="1b44e1d426115821" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-1.2.10.0" newVersion="1.2.10.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
</assemblyBinding>
</runtime>

Could not load file or assembly 'AjaxControlToolkit,

<tt:TooltipExtender ID="teAutoServiceShutdown" TargetControlID="cbAutoServiceShutdown"
Parser Error Message: Could not load file or assembly 'AjaxControlToolkit, Version=3.0.20820.16598, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=28f01b0e84b6d53e' or one of its dependencies. The located assembly's manifest definition does not match the assembly reference. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80131040)
what to do?
I know this question is nearly a year old, but I just ran into this problem myself. I solved it by simply doing "Build -> Clean Solution" which I guess cleared the assembly cache.
Few possible ways:
Read How the Runtime Locates Assemblies and then try to figure out whether an assembly is referenced correctly and is in any of the expected path (basically you can manually go through the assembly resolving steps yourself and see whether you are able to find reference yourself ;) )
Remove a reference from project file (and I believe web.config), cleanup solution, add reference again
Build project manually using msbuild YourSolution.sln /v:diag > log.txt command line and then see generated log.txt file for any issues while an assembly reference resolving
Use filemon tool to see where Visual Studio trying to find a file
The build Output window should give you a fix/workaround for this problem.
Clean and rebuild the solution.
Examine the contents of the Output window, look for this text:
Consider app.config remapping of assembly "AjaxControlToolkit, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=28f01b0e84b6d53e" from Version "4.1.40412.0" [C:\Visual Studio\App\Lib\bin\Debug\AjaxControlToolkit.dll]
Following this there will be a fragment you can paste into the <assemblyBinding> section of your web.config.
C:\Program Files (x86)\MSBuild\14.0\bin\Microsoft.Common.CurrentVersion.targets(1819,5): warning MSB3247:
Found conflicts between different versions of the same dependent assembly.
In Visual Studio, double-click this warning (or select it and press Enter) to fix the conflicts;
otherwise, add the following binding redirects to the "runtime" node in the application configuration file:
<assemblyBinding xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1">
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="AjaxControlToolkit" culture="neutral" publicKeyToken="28f01b0e84b6d53e" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-16.1.0.0" newVersion="16.1.0.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
</assemblyBinding>
Once you paste that in and rebuild it should automatically reference the version of the Toolkit specified as the newVersion.

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