* Update to .NET 5
.NET 5 brings many performance (especially regex) improvements
https://devblogs.microsoft.com/dotnet/announcing-net-5-0/
Can look at bringing the packages upto date and using a single file executable in a future PR if the maintainers are interested
* Dotnet restore before building
* Restore on Windows only
* Out of ideas
* Update framework for windows specific apps
* Don't upgrade Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration
* drop mono from the dotnet linux build instructions
* Fix logic to get app runtime
* readme: add windows .net prereq link
* Update README.md
* azure-pipeline: bump minorversion to 17
Co-authored-by: garfield69 <garfieldsixtynine@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Diego Heras <ngosang@hotmail.es>
Co-authored-by: ilike2burnthing <59480337+ilike2burnthing@users.noreply.github.com>
https://natemcmaster.com/blog/2017/03/09/vs2015-to-vs2017-upgrade/
This change brings the remaining two projects (Tray and Service) onto the new csproj format. Along with making them simpler and cleaner, its a needed step to get Windows users onto .NET Core
Again, been a careful as possible, so hopefully nothing breaks. Would recommend merging this after .NET Core 3.1 commit gets released and a beta release for this as well
* Remove static configuration class that required prior knowledge of when it was initialised to dependency injected method that ensures all configuration has already occured.
* Specify a different log name for the updater, require a path when running the Jackett updater
* Update to all .NET Standard packages
* Explicitly specify the restore project style
* Move automapper out of the DI framework and put crude detection to prevent it from initializing more than once.
* Move service config service back into shared .NET Framework Library
* Move Content files into shared folder. Make autoface load different assembilies depending on what framework is using it.
* Change my mind on what the shared module should be called. Common Module is too bland.
* DotNet4.SocksProxy is not yet publically .NET Standard. Revert to previous SocksWebProxy package.
* Check in unstaged change to test dependency injection setup.
* Use platform detection that works on mono 4.6+
* Move to use package reference for restoring nuget packages.
* DateTimeRoutines does not have Nuget packages that support .NET Standard (and therefore .NET Core). We will have to include them for now until we can get rid of this dependency.
* Start spliting some interfaces into their own files - this will help by allowing us to split them out in the future into a seperate project so the actual implementations can stay within their respective architectures when required
* Move out common libraries
* Few more tidy up tasks to get things working with .NET Standard
* Restructure the solution layout
* Encoding work to reduce rework later on platforms without Windows codepages (or require compliance with RFC1345)
* Move folder structure around to have more natural layout of the solutions
* DI server configuration to get rid of "temporary" hack and dependency circle for serverservice
* Make all encoding consistent to match the expected encoding casing for earlier versions of mono.
* Move to use package reference for restoring nuget packages.
* Return a task result for this async method.
* Update to a supported version of the .NET Framework. This also has the side effect of allowing us to automatically generate our binding redirects on build.
* Set the solution to target VS2017
* Update test solution csproj file to support being built through MSBuild 15
* Move to use package reference for restoring nuget packages.
* Return a task result for this async method.
* Update to a supported version of the .NET Framework. This also has the side effect of allowing us to automatically generate our binding redirects on build.
* Set the solution to target VS2017
* Update test solution csproj file to support being built through MSBuild 15