Unnecessary project rebuilds when unit testing in Visual Studio

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Solution 1

For my case the solution was to change the build action of a config file from "Copy always" to "Copy if newer". It took a while to find as I had to change the build output details to get the details about which file was causing the error, e.g.

Project 'xyz' is not up to date. Project item 'c:\my\path\web.config.dev' has 'Copy to Output Directory' attribute set to 'Copy always'.

From my experience it can also happen that different file names are shown when building multiple times, so make sure you have the right one and / or build again if the problem persists.

Also have a look at this question and its answers to find some more information.

Solution 2

I have worked around this problem by deleting the .pdb file in the \obj folder. It seems that visual studio is checking file modification time to decide if it should build or not the project (in your case ExampleProjectA) and the .cshtml is newer than the pdb. But when launching the build, project changes in .cshtml files are not triggering the .pdb rebuild, so the problem remains.

By deleting the .pdb in \obj folder (not in \bin as the file there is copied from \obj and would keep the old modification time) the modification time for the .pdb is newer than the .cshtml and the VS doesn't need to build the project before running the tests. Of course this only works until the next time you modify a .cshtml file, that's why I qualify it as just a workaround.

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Gorgsenegger

I am a cybernetic organism from the future. I've used many different programming languages over the years, such as QBasic, Turbo Pascal, PHP, APL, VB, Java, C#, ASP.NET, ASP.NET MVC. I also wrote some apps for the Windows 10 Mobile platform which, sadly, has been abandoned by Microsoft. Recently, I've started to get involved with blockchain, smart contracts (Solidity) and self-sovereign identities (SSI). I'm also interested in agile (mindset and transition), photography and numerous other things. On my website you can find a mixture of Quake mapping related information, IoT device tinkering and other stuff.

Updated on September 15, 2022

Comments

  • Gorgsenegger
    Gorgsenegger over 1 year

    I know about this question (and answers), but despite trying all the suggested options I am still stuck.

    I have a solution with multiple projects, but for this particular case let's say I've got my ExampleProjectA and a corresponding unit test project ExampleProjectATest. The first one is added as a reference to the test project - not via Visual Studio's "Project References" but as a link to the DLL (something like "..\Path\$(Config)\ExampleProjectA.dll") - this is due to build server requirements in our company, but the problem also existed when we still had "Project References".

    • Building and then running a single unit test works fine
    • Changing just a single letter in a unit test and then letting the test run always results in a rebuild of ExampleProjectA, even though this shouldn't be necessary
    • Setting all (there were only a few) files in ExampleProjectA from "Copy always" to "Copy if newer" in their respective properties didn't help
    • Checking the checkbox under Tools => Options => Projects and Solutions => Build an Run (see below) also didn't change anything Visual Studio 2013 setting

    To see if there was any more information available, I changed the build output settings to diagnostic. Each time a rebuild of ExampleProjectA is triggered, the first line in the output windows is

    1>Project 'ExampleProjectATest' is not up to date. Input file 'c:\tfs\mysolution-dev\exampleprojectatest\myfolder\namegeneratortest.cs' is modified after output file 'C:\tfs\mysolution-dev\exampleprojectatest\bin\Release\exampleprojectatest.pdb'.

    The class name written to the window (e.g. namegeneratortest.cs) changes according to which test file I change.

    Not sure why this message comes up, but the next step was to disable the debugging information as shown below under Project properties => Build => Advanced => Output => Debug Info => None:

    Advanced Build Settings

    Still the same, nothing's changed.

    Another thing I tried was to check the timestamps of the files contained in my solution folder (as there was a case where a user had a file with a future timestamp - see linked post) - to no avail.

    Last thing I tried was to change the build settings in the Configuration Manager to a different target platform - some settings wouldn't let me build the solution successfully, some other settings did, but the problem described persisted, so no change.

    The behaviour is similar (not the same though) with both the Visual Studio Test Runner and the one provided by ReSharper.

    Visual Studio Test Runner

    Project 'ExampleProject' is not up to date. Input file 'C:\tfs\mysolution-dev\exampleprojecta\Views\Shared\someview.cshtml' is modified after output file 'C:\tfs\mysolution-dev\exampleprojecta\bin\exampleprojecta.pdb'.

    ReSharper Test Runner

    Project 'ExampleProjectATest' is not up to date. Input file 'c:\tfs\mysolution-dev\exampleprojectatest\myfolder\namegeneratortest.cs' is modified after output file 'C:\tfs\mysolution-dev\exampleprojectatest\bin\Release\exampleprojectatest.pdb'.

    I'm using Visual Studio 2013 Premium Edition with ReSharper 8.2 and the latest updates, the projects in our solution file are in C#.

    Update

    To clarify - the first line in the output window does show that the test project has to be rebuilt - this is fine. The following lines, however, indicate that also ExampleProjectA has to be rebuilt, which shouldn't be necessary. Subsequent messages to the output window also show that other projects (referenced from ExampleProjectA have to be rebuilt.

    Update 2

    Despite installing Update 4, nothing has changed.

  • Gorgsenegger
    Gorgsenegger over 9 years
    Thanks, I'll try out Update 3 and see whether things have improved.
  • Gorgsenegger
    Gorgsenegger over 9 years
    Sorry for the delayed reply, busy busy busy... Unfrotunately the update didn't improve anyhting, changing something in ExampleA also leads to a rebuild of ExampleATest.
  • wrschneider
    wrschneider over 8 years
    I am on Visual Studio 2013 Update 4. This answer cut down some of the unnecessary project rebuilds but there still appear to be a few more.
  • Paul Suart
    Paul Suart about 7 years
    Fantastic! We had a project containing nothing but resource files that were "copy always". Since everything depended on this project... everything was always getting built.