NuGet |
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boots |
Cake.Boots |
Azure DevOps | App Center | Github Actions | Bitrise |
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boots
is a .NET global tool for "bootstrapping" vsix & pkg files.
boots
is useful for pinning a version of Mono, Xamarin, etc. when building projects on Azure DevOps Hosted Agents. You don't get to choose what versions of things are installed on each agent, so it makes sense to install things yourself for reproducible builds. It also allows you to install preview versions of things (or more recent!) before they come preinstalled on Hosted build agents.
dotnet tool install --global boots
boots https://url/to/your/package
boots
currently supports Windows & Mac OSX, therefore:
- On Windows - assumes the file is a
.vsix
and installs it into all instances of Visual Studio viaVSIXInstaller.exe
. - On Mac OSX - assumes the file is a
.pkg
and installs it
By querying the Visual Studio updater manifests, boots
1.0.2 or
higher allows you to install the latest versions of Xamarin or Mono
from the stable or preview channels.
Some examples:
boots --stable Mono
boots --preview Xamarin.Android
boots --preview Xamarin.iOS
boots --preview Xamarin.Mac
This would install the latest stable Mono and the latest previews for Xamarin.Android, Xamarin.iOS, and Xamarin.Mac.
You can also use boots
from a Cake script:
#addin nuget:?package=Cake.Boots&version=1.0.3.556
Task("Boots")
.Does(async () =>
{
if (!IsRunningOnWindows ()) {
await Boots (Product.XamarinMac, ReleaseChannel.Stable);
await Boots (Product.XamariniOS, ReleaseChannel.Preview);
}
await Boots (Product.XamarinAndroid, ReleaseChannel.Preview);
});
If you omit the second ReleaseChannel
parameter, it will default to ReleaseChannel.Stable
.
NOTE! if you need to install Mono, do this in a separate process from the rest of your Cake build.
For example:
Task("Mono")
.Does(async () =>
{
await Boots (Product.Mono);
});
Then invoke Cake twice:
dotnet cake --target=Mono
dotnet cake --target=Boots
CI systems are somewhat notorious for random networking failures. Starting in boots 1.0.4, you can control some of this behavior:
--timeout <seconds> Specifies a timeout for HttpClient. If omitted, uses the .NET default of 100 seconds.
--read-write-timeout <seconds> Specifies a timeout for reading/writing from a HttpClient stream. If omitted, uses a default of 300 seconds.
--retries <int> Specifies a number of retries for HttpClient failures. If omitted, uses a default of 3 retries.
This can also be defined in a Cake script with the
BootsSettings
class:
var settings = new BootsSettings {
Channel = ReleaseChannel.Stable,
Product = Product.XamarinAndroid,
Timeout = TimeSpan.FromSeconds (100),
ReadWriteTimeout = TimeSpan.FromMinutes (5),
NetworkRetries = 3,
};
await Boots (settings);
Install the extension into your DevOps instance and add the task to a build or release, or use it from YAML:
steps:
- task: Boots@1
displayName: Install Xamarin.Android
inputs:
uri: https://aka.ms/xamarin-android-commercial-d16-4-windows
You can install the Boots Extension from the VS Marketplace.
See the Boots Task Extension Source for more details.
If you don't want to use the extension, alternatively you can:
variables:
DOTNET_CLI_TELEMETRY_OPTOUT: true
steps:
- script: |
dotnet tool install --global boots
boots https://aka.ms/xamarin-android-commercial-d16-4-windows
DOTNET_CLI_TELEMETRY_OPTOUT
is optional.
DOTNET_SKIP_FIRST_TIME_EXPERIENCE
is also a good idea if you are running on a .NET Core older than 3.0.
For more information on how to source urls for each platform, see how to find builds
Install Mono, Xamarin.Android, and Xamarin.iOS on Mac OSX:
boots https://download.mono-project.com/archive/6.4.0/macos-10-universal/MonoFramework-MDK-6.4.0.198.macos10.xamarin.universal.pkg
boots https://aka.ms/xamarin-android-commercial-d16-4-macos
boots https://download.visualstudio.microsoft.com/download/pr/5a678460-107f-4fcf-8764-80419bc874a0/3f78c6826132f6f8569524690322adba/xamarin.ios-13.8.1.17.pkg
Install Xamarin.Android on Windows:
boots https://aka.ms/xamarin-android-commercial-d16-4-windows
boots
now uses System.CommandLine
, so we get rich help text for free:
> boots --help
boots:
boots 1.0.x File issues at: https://github.com/jonathanpeppers/boots/issues
Usage:
boots [options]
Options:
--url <url> A URL to a pkg or vsix file to install
--stable <product> Install the latest *stable* version of a product from VS manifests. Options include: Xamarin.Android, Xamarin.iOS, Xamarin.Mac, and Mono.
--preview <product> Install the latest *preview* version of a product from VS manifests. Options include: Xamarin.Android, Xamarin.iOS, Xamarin.Mac, and Mono.
--file-type <msi|pkg|vsix> Specifies the type of file to be installed such as vsix, pkg, or msi. Defaults to vsix on Windows and pkg on macOS.
--timeout <seconds> Specifies a timeout for HttpClient. If omitted, uses the .NET default of 100 seconds.
--read-write-timeout <seconds> Specifies a timeout for reading/writing from a HttpClient stream. If omitted, uses a default of 300 seconds.
--retries <int> Specifies a number of retries for HttpClient failures. If omitted, uses a default of 3 retries.
--version Show version information
-?, -h, --help Show help and usage information
samples/HelloForms.sln
is a "Hello World" Xamarin.Forms project configured with boots
installing newer versions than what is available on App Center:
See appcenter-pre-build.sh
in this repo for an example of setting up boots
. See the App Center docs for further detail about custom build scripts.
I was able to get boots
to work on both Windows & macOS agents in Github Actions.
See actions.yml
for an example.
boots
has been tested, and appears to work fine on:
Any build environment that can be configured to run .NET Core 2.1, can run boots
. If you have success on other CI systems, let us know!