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.netmodule files as linker input

link.exe accepts MSIL .obj and .netmodule files as input. The output file produced by the linker is an assembly or a .netmodule file with no run-time dependency on any of the .obj or .netmodule files that were input to the linker.

Remarks

.netmodule files are created by the MSVC compiler with /LN (Create MSIL module) or by the linker with /NOASSEMBLY (Create a MSIL Module). .obj files are always created in a C++ compilation. For other Visual Studio compilers, use the /target:module compiler option.

The linker must be passed the .obj file from the C++ compilation that created the .netmodule. Passing in a .netmodule is no longer supported because the /clr:pure and /clr:safe compiler options are deprecated in Visual Studio 2015 and unsupported in Visual Studio 2017 and later.

For information on how to invoke the linker from the command line, see Linker command-line syntax and Use the MSVC toolset from the command line.

Passing a .netmodule or .dll file to the linker that was compiled by the MSVC compiler with /clr can result in a linker error. For more information, see Choosing the format of .netmodule input files.

The linker accepts both native .obj files and MSIL .obj files compiled with /clr. You can pass mixed .obj files in the same build. The resulting output file's default verifiability is the same as the lowest input module's verifiability.

You can change an application that's composed of two or more assemblies to be contained in one assembly. Recompile the assemblies' sources, and then link the .obj files or .netmodule files to produce a single assembly.

Specify an entry point using /ENTRY (Entry-point symbol) when creating an executable image.

When linking with an MSIL .obj or .netmodule file, use /LTCG (Link-time code generation), otherwise when the linker encounters the MSIL .obj or .netmodule, it will restart the link with /LTCG. You'll see an informational message that the link is restarting. You can ignore this message, but to improve linker performance, explicitly specify /LTCG.

MSIL .obj or .netmodule files can also be passed to cl.exe.

Input MSIL .obj or .netmodule files can't have embedded resources. Embed resources in an output module or assembly file by using the /ASSEMBLYRESOURCE (Embed a managed resource) linker option. Or, use the /resource compiler option in other Visual Studio compilers.

Examples

In C++ code, the catch block of a corresponding try will be invoked for a non-System exception. However, by default, the CLR wraps non-System exceptions with RuntimeWrappedException. When an assembly is created from C++ and non-C++ modules, and you want a catch block in C++ code to be invoked from its corresponding try clause when the try block throws a non-System exception, you must add the [assembly:System::Runtime::CompilerServices::RuntimeCompatibility(WrapNonExceptionThrows=false)] attribute to the source code for the non-C++ modules.

// MSIL_linking.cpp
// compile with: /c /clr
value struct V {};

ref struct MCPP {
   static void Test() {
      try {
         throw (gcnew V);
      }
      catch (V ^) {
         System::Console::WriteLine("caught non System exception in C++ source code file");
      }
   }
};

/*
int main() {
   MCPP::Test();
}
*/

By changing the Boolean value of the WrapNonExceptionThrows attribute, you modify the ability of the C++ code to catch a non-System exception.

// MSIL_linking_2.cs
// compile with: /target:module /addmodule:MSIL_linking.obj
// post-build command: link /LTCG MSIL_linking.obj MSIL_linking_2.netmodule /entry:MLinkTest.Main /out:MSIL_linking_2.exe /subsystem:console
using System.Runtime.CompilerServices;

// enable non System exceptions
[assembly:RuntimeCompatibility(WrapNonExceptionThrows=false)]

class MLinkTest {
   public static void Main() {
      try {
         MCPP.Test();
      }
      catch (RuntimeWrappedException) {
         System.Console.WriteLine("caught a wrapped exception in C#");
      }
   }
}
caught non System exception in C++ source code file

See also