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c#visual-studiovisual-studio-2005assembliesstrongname

How to fix "Referenced assembly does not have a strong name" error


I've added a weakly named assembly to my Visual Studio 2005 project (which is strongly named). I'm now getting the error:

"Referenced assembly 'xxxxxxxx' does not have a strong name"

Do I need to sign this third-party assembly?


Solution

  • To avoid this error you could either:

    • Load the assembly dynamically, or
    • Sign the third-party assembly.

    You will find instructions on signing third-party assemblies in .NET-fu: Signing an Unsigned Assembly (Without Delay Signing).

    Signing Third-Party Assemblies

    The basic principle to sign a thirp-party is to

    1. Disassemble the assembly using ildasm.exe and save the intermediate language (IL):

      ildasm /all /out=thirdPartyLib.il thirdPartyLib.dll 
      
    2. Rebuild and sign the assembly:

      ilasm /dll /key=myKey.snk thirdPartyLib.il
      

    Fixing Additional References

    The above steps work fine unless your third-party assembly (A.dll) references another library (B.dll) which also has to be signed. You can disassemble, rebuild and sign both A.dll and B.dll using the commands above, but at runtime, loading of B.dll will fail because A.dll was originally built with a reference to the unsigned version of B.dll.

    The fix to this issue is to patch the IL file generated in step 1 above. You will need to add the public key token of B.dll to the reference. You get this token by calling

    sn -Tp B.dll 
    

    which will give you the following output:

    Microsoft (R) .NET Framework Strong Name Utility  Version 4.0.30319.33440
    Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation.  All rights reserved.
    
    Public key (hash algorithm: sha1):
    002400000480000094000000060200000024000052534131000400000100010093d86f6656eed3
    b62780466e6ba30fd15d69a3918e4bbd75d3e9ca8baa5641955c86251ce1e5a83857c7f49288eb
    4a0093b20aa9c7faae5184770108d9515905ddd82222514921fa81fff2ea565ae0e98cf66d3758
    cb8b22c8efd729821518a76427b7ca1c979caa2d78404da3d44592badc194d05bfdd29b9b8120c
    78effe92
    
    Public key token is a8a7ed7203d87bc9
    

    The last line contains the public key token. You then have to search the IL of A.dll for the reference to B.dll and add the token as follows:

    .assembly extern /*23000003*/ MyAssemblyName
    {
      .publickeytoken = (A8 A7 ED 72 03 D8 7B C9 )                         
      .ver 10:0:0:0
    }