Making Custom Projects Version-Aware
In your custom project system, you can allow projects of that type to load in multiple versions of Visual Studio. You can also prevent projects of that type from loading in an earlier version of Visual Studio. You can also enable that project to identify itself to a later version in case the project requires repair, conversion, or deprecation.
Allowing Projects to Load in Multiple Versions
You can modify most projects that were created in Visual Studio 2010 with SP1 or later to work in multiple versions.
Before a project is loaded, Visual Studio calls the UpgradeProject_CheckOnly method to determine whether the project can be upgraded. If the project can be upgraded, the UpgradeProject_CheckOnly
method sets a flag that causes a later call to the UpgradeProject method to upgrade the project. Because incompatible projects can’t be upgraded, UpgradeProject_CheckOnly
must first check for project compatibility, as described in the earlier section.
You, as the author of a project system, implement UpgradeProject_CheckOnly
(from the IVsProjectUpgradeViaFactory4
interface) to provide users of your project system with an upgrade check. When users open a project, this method is called to determine whether a project must be repaired before it is loaded. The possible upgrade requirements are enumerated in VSPUVF_REPAIRFLAGS
, and they include the following possibilities:
SPUVF_PROJECT_NOREPAIR
: Requires no repair.VSPUVF_PROJECT_SAFEREPAIR
: Makes the project compatible with an earlier version without the issues that you might have encounter with the previous versions of the product.VSPUVF_PROJECT_UNSAFEREPAIR
: Makes the project backwards-compatible but with some risk of the issues that you might have encountered with previous versions of the product. For example, the project won’t be compatible if it depended on different SDK versions.VSPUVF_PROJECT_ONEWAYUPGRADE
: Makes the project incompatible with an earlier version.VSPUVF_PROJECT_INCOMPATIBLE
: Indicates that the current version doesn’t support this project.VSPUVF_PROJECT_DEPRECATED
: Indicates that this project is no longer supported.
Note
To avoid confusion, don’t combine upgrade flags when you set them. For example, don't create an ambiguous upgrade status such as VSPUVF_PROJECT_SAFEREPAIR | VSPUVF_PROJECT_DEPRECATED
.
Project flavors may implement the function UpgradeProjectFlavor_CheckOnly
from the IVsProjectFlavorUpgradeViaFactory2
interface. To make this function work, the IVsProjectUpgradeViaFactory4.UpgradeProject_CheckOnly
implementation mentioned earlier must call it. This call is already implemented in the Visual Basic or C# base project system. The effect of this function enables project flavors to also determine the upgrade requirements of a project, in addition to what the base project system has determined. The compatibility dialog box shows the most severe of the two requirements.
When Visual Studio performs an upgrade check, it provides a logger instead of a NULL value as in previous versions of Visual Studio. The logger enables project systems and flavors to provide additional information that can help you understand the nature of the changes that are needed to make your older projects load properly. We recommend that you use the logger to provide more information instead of using dialog boxes. For more information, see The Upgrade Logger later in this topic.
For Managed implementations, the project upgrade interfaces are available in the Microsoft.VisualStudio.Shell.Interop.11.0.dll interop assembly.
The UpgradeProject
method can determine whether the changes it makes would prevent the project from loading in an previous version of Visual Studio. If so, the method marks the project as incompatible. To understand how a project is marked as incompatible, see Marking a Project as Incompatible earlier in this topic. We recommend that, after this dialog box appears, you mark the project as incompatible by calling the method IVsAppCompat.BreakAssetCompatibility
directly, instead of first calling the IVsAppCompat.AskForUserConsentToBreakAssetCompat
method because the dialog box doesn’t need to appear twice.
Here is an example to help summarize the compatibility user experience. If a project was created in an earlier version, and the current version determines that an upgrade is required, Visual Studio displays a dialog box to ask the user for permission to make the changes. If the user agrees, the project is modified and then loaded. If the solution is then closed and reopened in the earlier version, the one-way-upgraded project will be incompatible and not loaded. If the project had only required a repair (instead of an upgrade), the repaired project will still open in both versions.
Marking a Project as Incompatible
You can mark a project as incompatible with earlier versions of Visual Studio. For example, suppose you create a project that uses a .NET Framework 4.5 feature. Because this project can’t be built in Visual Studio 2010, you can mark it as incompatible to prevent that version from trying to load it.
The component that adds the incompatible feature is responsible for marking the project as incompatible. The component must have access to the IVsHierarchy interface that represents the projects of interest.
To mark a project as incompatible
In the component, get an
IVsAppCompat
interface from the global service SVsSolution.For more information, see SVsSolution.
In the component, call
IVsAppCompat.AskForUserConsentToBreakAssetCompat
, and pass it an array ofIVsHierarchy
interfaces that represent the projects of interest.This method has the following signature:
HRESULT AskForUserConsentToBreakAssetCompat([in] SAFEARRAY(IVsHierarchy*) sarrProjectHierarchies)
If you implement this code, a project compatibility dialog box will appear. The dialog box will asks the user for permission to mark all specified projects as incompatible. If the user agrees,
AskForUserConsentToBreakAssetCompat
returnsS_OK
; otherwise,AskForUserConsentToBreakAssetCompat
returnsOLE_E_PROMPTSAVECANCELLED
.Warning
In most common scenarios, the
IVsHierarchy
array will contain only one item.If
AskForUserConsentToBreakAssetCompat
returnsS_OK
, the component makes or accepts the changes that break compatibility.In your component, call the
IVsAppCompat.BreakAssetCompatibility
method for each project that you want to mark as incompatible. The component can set the value of the parameterlpszMinimumVersion
to a specific minimum version instead of having Visual Studio look up the current version string in the registry. This approach minimizes the risk of the component inadvertently setting a higher value in the future, based on what is in the registry at that time. If that higher value were set, Visual Studio couldn't open the project.This method has the following signature:
HRESULT BreakAssetCompatibility([in] IVsHierarchy * pProjHier), [in] LPCOLESTR lpszMinimumVersion);
If the component sets
lpszMinimumVersion
to NULL, theBreakAssetCompatibility
method calls theIVsAppCompat.GetCurrentDesignTimeCompatVersion
method to obtain a string that represents the current version of Visual Studio.This method has the following signature:
HRESULT GetCurrentDesignTimeCompatVersion([out] BSTR * pbstrCurrentDesignTimeCompatVersion)
The BreakAssetCompatibility method then calls the
IVsHierarchy.SetProperty
method to set the rootVSHPROPID_MinimumDesignTimeCompatVersion
property to the value of the version string that you obtained in the previous step.For more information, see SetProperty.
Important
You must implement the VSHPROPID_MinimumDesignTimeCompatVersion
property to mark a project as compatible or incompatible. For example, if the project system uses an MSBuild project file, add to the project file a <MinimumVisualStudioVersion>
build property that has a value equal to the corresponding VSHPROPID_MinimumDesignTimeCompatVersion
property value.
Detecting Whether a Project is Incompatible
A project that is incompatible with the current version of Visual Studio must be kept from loading. Furthermore, a project that is incompatible can’t be upgraded or repaired. Therefore, a project must be checked for compatibility twice: first, when it is being considered for upgrade or repair, and second, before it is loaded.
To enable the detection of project incompatibility, you must implement the UpgradeProject_CheckOnly and CreateProject methods. If a project is incompatible, UpgradeProject_CheckOnly
must return the success code VS_S_INCOMPATIBLEPROJECT
, and CreateProject
must return the error code VS_E_INCOMPATIBLEPROJECT
. For flavored projects, you must implement IVsProjectFlavorUpgradeViaFactory2.UpgradeProjectFlavor_CheckOnly
instead of IVsProjectUpgradeViaFactory4.UpgradeProject_CheckOnly
.
A project system is referred to as flavored if it has a web, Office (VSTO), Silverlight, or other project type built on top of it. Older project systems that already implement IVsProjectUpgradeViaFactory.UpgradeProject_CheckOnly
and flavored project systems that already implement IVsProjectFlavorUpgradeViaFactory.UpgradeProjectFlavor_CheckOnly
continue to be supported. The older version of IVsProjectUpgradeViaFactory.UpgradeProject_CheckOnly
has the following implementation signature:
IVsProjectUpgradeViaFactory::UpgradeProject_CheckOnly(
/* [in] */ BSTR bstrFileName,
/* [in] */ IVsUpgradeLogger *pLogger,
/* [out] */ BOOL *pUpgradeRequired,
/* [out] */ GUID *pguidNewProjectFactory,
/* [out] */ VSPUVF_FLAGS *pUpgradeProjectCapabilityFlags
)
If this method sets pUpgradeRequired
to TRUE and returns S_OK
, the result is treated as “Upgrade” and as though the method set an upgrade flag to the value VSPUVF_PROJECT_ONEWAYUPGRADE
, which is described later in this topic. The following return values are supported by using this older method but only when pUpgradeRequired
is set to TRUE:
VS_S_PROJECT_SAFEREPAIRREQUIRED
. This return value translates thepUpgradeRequired
value to TRUE as equivalent toVSPUVF_PROJECT_SAFEREPAIR
, which is described later in this topic.VS_S_PROJECT_UNSAFEREPAIRREQUIRED
. This return value translates thepUpgradeRequired
value to TRUE as equivalent toVSPUVF_PROJECT_UNSAFEREPAIR
, which is described later in this topicVS_S_PROJECT_ONEWAYUPGRADEREQUIRED
. This return value translates thepUpgradeRequired
value to TRUE as equivalent toVSPUVF_PROJECT_ONEWAYUPGRADE
, which is described later in this topic.The new implementations in
IVsProjectUpgradeViaFactory4
andIVsProjectFlavorUpgradeViaFactory2
enable specifying the migration type more precisely.
Note
You can cache the result of the compatibility check by the UpgradeProject_CheckOnly
method so that it can also be used by the subsequent call to CreateProject
.
For example, if the UpgradeProject_CheckOnly
and CreateProject
methods that are written for a Visual Studio 2010 with SP1 project system examine a project file and find that the <MinimumVisualStudioVersion>
build property is "11.0", Visual Studio 2010 with SP1 won’t load the project. In addition, Solution Navigator would indicate that the project is “incompatible” and won’t load it.
The Upgrade Logger
The call to IVsProjectUpgradeViaFactory::UpgradeProject
contains an IVsUpgradeLogger
logger, which project systems and flavors should use to provide detailed upgrade tracing for troubleshooting. If a warning or an error is logged, Visual Studio shows the upgrade report.
When you write to the upgrade logger, consider the following guidelines:
Visual Studio will call Flush after all projects have finished upgrading. Don’t call it in your project system.
The LogMessage function has the following ErrorLevels:
0 is for any information that you’d like to trace.
1 is for a warning.
2 is for an error
3 is for the Report formatter. When your project is upgraded, log the word “Converted” once, and don’t localize the word.
If a project doesn’t require any repair or upgrade, Visual Studio will generate the log file only if the project system had logged a warning or an error during UpgradeProject_CheckOnly or UpgradeProjectFlavor_CheckOnly methods.