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porting-guidelines.md

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Porting existing applications to .NET Core 3.0

We suggest doing migration in a separate branch or, if you're not using version control, creating a copy of your project so you have a clean state to go back to if necessary.

The migration process includes two steps: preparing your project for porting to .NET Core and porting itself.

Prepare your project for porting

  1. Run .NET Portability Analyzer first to determine if there are any APIs your application depends on that are missing in .NET Core. If there are, you have a few options.

    • Remove not supported APIs or replace them with those, that are included in .NET Core
    • Separate your code into different projects: the one that contains only .NET Core supported APIs and another with APIs not supported in .NET Core. Migrate only the first project.
  2. Start from a working solution. Ensure the solution opens, builds, and runs without any issues.

  3. Replace packages.config with PackageReference. If your project uses NuGet packages, you will need to add the same NuGet packages to the new .NET Core project. .NET Core projects support only PackageReference for adding NuGet packages. To move your NuGet references from packages.config to your project file, right-click on packages.config -> Migrate packages.config to PackageReference....

    You can learn more about this migration in our docs.

  4. Migrate to the SDK-style .csproj file. The new SDK-style .csproj format is leaner and easier to read. To be able to simply copy-paste your references from the old project to the new one, you first need to migrate your old project file to SDK-style so both project are in the same format. You can either do it by hand or use a third-party tool CsprojToVs2017.

    After using the tool you still might need to delete some reference by hand, for example:

    <Reference Include="System.Data.DataSetExtensions" />
    <Reference Include="Microsoft.CSharp" />
    <Reference Include="System.Net.Http" />

    After you've migrated to the new SDK-style format, ensure your project builds and runs successfully.

  5. Configure assembly file generation. Most existing projects include an AssemblyInfo.cs file in the Properties folder. The new project style uses a different approach and generates the same assembly attributes as part of the build process. As a result, you might end up with two AssemblyInfo.cs files and your build will fail. There are two ways to resolve this problem. You can either:

    • Disable AssemblyInfo.cs generation on build by setting the property:
      <GenerateAssemblyInfo>false</GenerateAssemblyInfo>
    • Move the static values from AssemblyInfo.cs to properties in the new .csproj file.

    Build and run to make sure you didn't introduce any issues while preparing your project. Now it's time to port it.

Port your project

  1. Add .NET Core Windows Forms project. Add a new .NET Core 3.0 Windows Forms project to the solution.

  2. Add <ProjectReference>. Copy the <ProjectReference> elements from the .csproj file of the original project to the new project's .csproj file. Note: The new project format does not use the Name and ProjectGuid elements, so you can safely delete those.

  3. Restore/Build. At this point, it's a good idea to restore/build to make sure all dependencies are properly configured.

  4. Link files. Link all files from your existing .NET Framework WinForms project to the .NET Core 3.0 WinForms project by adding following to the .csproj file.

    <ItemGroup>
        <Compile Include="..\<Your .NET Framework Project Name>\**\*.cs" />
        <EmbeddedResource Include="..\<Your .NET Framework Project Name>\**\*.resx" />
    </ItemGroup>
  5. Align default namespace and assembly name. Since you're linking to designer generated files (for example, Resources.Designer.cs) you generally want to make sure that the .NET Core version of your application uses the same namespace and the same assembly name. Copy the following settings from your .NET Framework project:

    <PropertyGroup>
        <RootNamespace><!-- (Your default namespace) --></RootNamespace>
        <AssemblyName><!-- (Your assembly name) --></AssemblyName>
    </PropertyGroup>
  6. Run new project. Set your new .NET Core project as StartUp Project and run it. Make sure everything works.

  7. Copy or leave linked. Now instead of linking the files, you can actually copy them from the old .NET Framework WinForms project to the new .NET Core 3.0 WinForms project. After that you can get rid of the old project. However if you'd like to use WinForms designer, it is not available in Visual Studio just yet. So you can stop at the step 8 and perform step 9 when the designer support is available.

Migration tips

Include the Windows.Compatibility Pack

Windows applications like Windows Forms and WPF often use APIs that aren't referenced by default in .NET Core. The reason is that .NET Core tries to reduce the risk that new applications accidentally depend on legacy technologies or on APIs that are Windows-only. However, when porting existing Windows applications, neither of these two aspects is a concern. To simplify your porting efforts, you can just reference the Windows Compatibility Pack which will give you access to many more APIs.

dotnet add package Microsoft.Windows.Compatibility

Migrating WCF clients

.NET Core has its own implementation of System.ServiceModel with some differences:

  • It's available as a set of NuGet packages (also included in the Windows Compatibility Pack).

  • There are unsupported features that you should review.

  • The binding and endpoint address must be specified in the service client constructor. Otherwise, if you reuse the ServiceReference created by Visual Studio, you may get the following error:

    System.PlatformNotSupportedException: 'Configuration files are not supported.'