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Breaking Change to .NET Packages on Winget #7428
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One caveat here is the Windows Package Manager does not yet support dependencies in the client. We are performing some validation on dependencies reported in manifests. Mainly, we're validating they exist in the repository. Performing the "add" before "remove" will ensure the manifests aren't pointing to non-existent dependencies, but there is no current logic in the released "stable" client to handle them. Related to: |
now powertoys depends on net 6 |
Are the back versions of .NET SDK being added or only the latest ones? I know some projects I've worked on have strict global.json files that prevent using newer SDKs (even patch versions). |
@jedieaston - We'll include the latest patch version of each of the SDKs. For example, for .NET 6 we have SDKs published for 6.0.105, 6.0.203, and 6.0.300. Does that provide what you're wanting? |
That's probably fine, although I work on projects sometimes that have So, in conclusion, don't do the extra work on my account :) (I'd just prefer in the future that you didn't remove intermediate versions unless there's a good reason, as most other packages in the repo do) |
The intention is to not remove any versions going forward. This was a breaking change to just get us to a stable and consistent point. |
Related issue: microsoft/winget-pkgs#61981 @denelon @mthalman |
Please have a look at this code might help you |
Breaking Change to .NET Packages on Winget
The Microsoft .NET team plans to make a set of breaking changes to the .NET packages that are available through the Windows Package Manager tool (winget). Existing .NET packages that are currently community maintained will be replaced by new packages with different package identifiers. This new set of packages will be officially supported by the .NET team and conform to a consistent naming convention.
Removal of Existing Winget Packages
A variety of .NET winget packages have been defined by the community. These are not consistently defined and do not conform to naming and versioning conventions used by the .NET product. These packages should be considered deprecated and will be removed and replaced by packages that are exclusively maintained by the .NET team.
The following packages are deprecated and will be removed:
Dependencies on Existing Packages
There are a set of packages that have dependencies on the above .NET packages to be removed. To avoid breaking these dependent packages, their dependencies will be updated to the new replacement packages before the deprecated ones are removed.
This is the set of packages which will have their dependencies updated:
New .NET packages
The .NET team will be replacing the previously mentioned community-maintained packages with a new set of packages with different package identifiers. These packages will be maintained by the .NET team and kept up to date as part of each servicing release for each of the supported .NET versions.
These are the package identifiers of the new set of packages to be added:
Implementation Timeline
Package Installation Instructions
In order to avoid compatibility issues, you must clean your machine of any existing .NET winget packages that are listed for removal prior to installing the new .NET packages.
Once you've installed the new .NET packages, upgrade will not work for those packages until a new winget feature is available. To work around this issue, you'll need to force an upgrade to the specific version that you want:
winget upgrade <package-id> --force --version <desired-version>
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