This is the documentation page for the .NET wrapper of OR-Tools.
This project aim to explain how you build a .Net native (for win-x64, linux-x64
and osx-x64) nuget package using dotnet
and few .csproj
.
The library is compiled against netcoreapp3.1
and net6.0
, so you'll only
need:
- .Net Core 3.1 LTS SDK
- .Net 6.0 LTS SDK
note: We won't/can't rely on VS 2022 since we want a portable cross-platform
dotnet/cli
pipeline.
Google.OrTools.runtime.linux-x64
: Contains the .Net Standard 2.1 native project for the rid linux-x64.Google.OrTools.runtime.linux-arm64
: Contains the .Net Standard 2.1 native project for the rid linux-arm64.Google.OrTools.runtime.osx-x64
: Contains the .Net Standard 2.1 native project for the rid osx-x64.Google.OrTools.runtime.osx-arm64
: Contains the .Net Standard 2.1 native project for the rid osx-arm64.Google.OrTools.runtime.win-x64
: Contains the .Net Standard 2.1 native project for the rid win-x64.Google.OrTools
Is the .Net Standard 2.1 meta-package which should depends on all previous available packages and contains the Reference Assembly.
note: While Microsoft use runtime-<rid>.Company.Project
for native libraries
naming, it is very difficult to get ownership on it, so you should prefer to use
Company.Project.runtime-<rid>
instead since you can have ownership on
Company.*
prefix more easily.
Either use the CMake base build or the Makefile based build. The workflow is
typically make dotnet
which will build both C# and F# libraries package. The
output will be placed in <build_dir>/dotnet/packages
folder. All tests will be
run based on this folder.
To Create a native dependent package we will split it in two parts:
- A bunch of
Google.OrTools.runtime.{rid}.nupkg
packages for each Runtime Identifier (RId) targeted. - A generic package
Google.OrTools.nupkg
depending on each runtime packages and containing the managed .Net code.
Actually, You don't need a specific variant of .Net Standard wrapper, simply omit the library extension and .Net magic will pick the correct native library. ref: https://www.mono-project.com/docs/advanced/pinvoke/#library-names
note: Microsoft.NetCore.App
packages
follow this layout.
We have two use case scenario:
-
Locally, be able to build a Google.OrTools package which only target the local
OS Platform
, i.e. building for only one Runtime Identifier (RID).
note: This is useful since the C++ build is a complex process for Windows, Linux and MacOS. i.e. We don't support cross-compilation for the native library generation. -
Be able to create a complete cross-platform (ed. platform as multiple rid) Google.OrTools package.
i.e. First you generate each native Nuget package (Google.OrTools.runtime.{rid}.nupkg
) on each native architecture, then copy paste these artifacts on one native machine to generate the meta-packageGoogle.OrTools
.
Let's start with scenario 1: Create a Local Google.OrTools
package targeting one
Runtime Identifier (RID).
We would like to build a Google.OrTools.nupkg
package which only depends
on one Google.OrTools.runtime.{rid}.nupkg
in order to work locally.
The pipeline for linux-x64
should be as follow:
note: The pipeline will be similar for osx-x64
and win-x64
architecture,
don't hesitate to look at the CI log.
disclaimer: We won't cover the C++ ortools library build. So first let's create
the local Google.OrTools.runtime.{rid}.nupkg
nuget package.
Here some dev-note concerning this Google.OrTools.runtime.{rid}.csproj
.
AssemblyName
must beGoogle.OrTools.dll
i.e. all {rid} projects must generate an assembly with the same name (i.e. no {rid} in the name). On the other hand package identifier will contain the {rid}...<RuntimeIdentifier>{rid}</RuntimeIdentifier> <AssemblyName>Google.OrTools</AssemblyName> <PackageId>Google.OrTools.runtime.{rid}</PackageId>
- Once you specify a
RuntimeIdentifier
thendotnet build
ordotnet build -r {rid}
will behave identically (save you from typing it). note: not the case if you useRuntimeIdentifiers
(notice the 's') - It is recommended
to add the tag
native
to the nuget package tags<PackageTags>native</PackageTags>
- Specify the output target folder for having the assembly output in
runtimes/{rid}/lib/netstandard2.0
in the nupkgnote: Every files with an extension different from<BuildOutputTargetFolder>runtimes/$(RuntimeIdentifier)/lib</BuildOutputTargetFolder>
.dll
will be filter out by nuget.
note: dotnet/cli automatically add the$(TargetFramework)
(i.e.netstandard2.0
) to the output path. - Add the native shared library to the nuget package in the repository
runtimes/{rib}/native
. e.g. for linux-x64:<Content Include="*.so"> <PackagePath>runtimes/linux-x64/native/%(Filename)%(Extension)</PackagePath> <Pack>true</Pack> <CopyToOutputDirectory>PreserveNewest</CopyToOutputDirectory> </Content>
- Generate the runtime package to a defined directory (i.e. so later in
Google.OrTools
package we will be able to locate it)<PackageOutputPath>{...}/packages</PackageOutputPath>
- Generate the Reference Assembly (but don't include it to this runtime nupkg !,
see below for explanation) using:
<ProduceReferenceAssembly>true</ProduceReferenceAssembly>
Then you can generate the package using:
dotnet pack Google.OrTools.runtime.{rid}
note: this will automatically trigger the dotnet build
.
If everything good the package (located where your PackageOutputPath
was
defined) should have this layout:
{...}/packages/Google.OrTools.runtime.{rid}.nupkg:
\- Google.OrTools.runtime.{rid}.nuspec
\- runtimes
\- {rid}
\- native
\- *.so / *.dylib / *.dll
...
note: {rid}
could be linux-x64
and {framework}
could be netstandard2.0
tips: since nuget package are zip archive you can use unzip -l <package>.nupkg
to study their layout.
So now, let's create the local Google.OrTools.nupkg
nuget package which will
depend on our previous runtime package.
Here some dev-note concerning this Google.OrTools.csproj
.
- Add the previous package directory:
<RestoreSources>{...}/packages;$(RestoreSources)</RestoreSources>
- Add dependency (i.e.
PackageReference
) on each runtime package(s) available:Thanks to the<ItemGroup Condition="Exists('{...}/packages/Google.OrTools.runtime.linux-x64.1.0.0.nupkg')"> <PackageReference Include="Google.OrTools.runtime.linux-x64" Version="1.0.0" /> </ItemGroup>
RestoreSource
we can work locally with our just builded package without the need to upload it on nuget.org. - To expose the .Net Surface API the
Google.OrTools.csproj
must contains at least one Reference Assembly of the previously rumtime package.xml <Content Include="../Google.OrTools.runtime.{rid}/bin/$(Configuration)/$(TargetFramework)/{rid}/ref/*.dll"> <PackagePath>ref/$(TargetFramework)/%(Filename)%(Extension)</PackagePath> <Pack>true</Pack> <CopyToOutputDirectory>PreserveNewest</CopyToOutputDirectory> </Content>
Then you can generate the package using:
dotnet pack Google.OrTools
If everything good the package (located where your PackageOutputPath
was
defined) should have this layout:
{...}/packages/Google.OrTools.nupkg:
\- Google.OrTools.nuspec
\- lib
\- {framework}
\- Google.OrTools.dll
...
note: {framework}
could be netcoreapp3.1
or/and net6.0
Let's start with scenario 2: Create a Complete Google.OrTools.nupkg
package
targeting multiple
Runtime Identifier (RID).
We would like to build a Google.OrTools.nupkg
package which depends on several
Google.OrTools.runtime.{rid}.nupkg
.
The pipeline should be as follow:
note: This pipeline should be run on any architecture, provided you have
generated the three architecture dependent Google.OrTools.runtime.{rid}.nupkg
nuget packages.
Like in the previous scenario, on each targeted OS Platform you can build the
corresponding Google.OrTools.runtime.{rid}.nupkg
package.
Simply run on each platform:
dotnet build <build_dir>/dotnet/Google.OrTools.runtime.{rid}
dotnet pack <build_dir>/dotnet/Google.OrTools.runtime.{rid}
note: replace {rid}
by the Runtime Identifier associated to the current OS
platform.
Then on one machine used, you copy all other packages in the {...}/packages
so
when building Google.OrTools.csproj
we can have access to all package...
This is the same step than in the previous scenario, since we "see" all runtime
packages in {...}/packages
, the project will depends on each of them.
Once copied all runtime package locally, simply run:
dotnet build <build_dir>/dotnet/Google.OrTools
dotnet pack <build_dir>/dotnet/Google.OrTools
The Test projects show examples of building applications with net6.0
.
The F# example folder shows how to compile against the typical .NET Framework installed on machine.
Few links on the subject...
.Net runtime can deduce library extension so don’t use a platform-specific
library name in the DllImport
statement.
Instead, just use the library name itself, without any prefixes or suffixes,
and rely on the runtime to find the appropriate library at runtime.
ref: Mono pinvoke#libraryname
- Common MSBuild project properties
- MSBuild well-known item metadata
- Additions to the csproj format for .NET Core
Some issue related to this process
PackageReference
only supportTargetFramework
condition- Nuget needs to support dependencies specific to target runtime #1660
- Improve documentation on creating native packages #238
- Guide for packaging C# library using P/Invoke
Image has been generated using plantuml:
plantuml -Tpng docs/{file}.dot
So you can find the dot source files in docs.