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Create a .NET Core application with plugins

This tutorial shows you how to create a custom AssemblyLoadContext to load plugins. An AssemblyDependencyResolver is used to resolve the dependencies of the plugin. The tutorial correctly isolates the plugin's dependencies from the hosting application. You'll learn how to:

Prerequisites

Note

The sample code targets .NET 5, but all the features it uses were introduced in .NET Core 3.0 and are available in all .NET releases since then.

Create the application

The first step is to create the application:

  1. Create a new folder, and in that folder run the following command:

    dotnet new console -o AppWithPlugin
    
  2. To make building the project easier, create a Visual Studio solution file in the same folder. Run the following command:

    dotnet new sln
    
  3. Run the following command to add the app project to the solution:

    dotnet sln add AppWithPlugin/AppWithPlugin.csproj
    

Now we can fill in the skeleton of our application. Replace the code in the AppWithPlugin/Program.cs file with the following code:

using PluginBase;
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.IO;
using System.Linq;
using System.Reflection;

namespace AppWithPlugin
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            try
            {
                if (args.Length == 1 && args[0] == "/d")
                {
                    Console.WriteLine("Waiting for any key...");
                    Console.ReadLine();
                }

                // Load commands from plugins.

                if (args.Length == 0)
                {
                    Console.WriteLine("Commands: ");
                    // Output the loaded commands.
                }
                else
                {
                    foreach (string commandName in args)
                    {
                        Console.WriteLine($"-- {commandName} --");

                        // Execute the command with the name passed as an argument.

                        Console.WriteLine();
                    }
                }
            }
            catch (Exception ex)
            {
                Console.WriteLine(ex);
            }
        }
    }
}

Create the plugin interfaces

The next step in building an app with plugins is defining the interface the plugins need to implement. We suggest that you make a class library that contains any types that you plan to use for communicating between your app and plugins. This division allows you to publish your plugin interface as a package without having to ship your full application.

In the root folder of the project, run dotnet new classlib -o PluginBase. Also, run dotnet sln add PluginBase/PluginBase.csproj to add the project to the solution file. Delete the PluginBase/Class1.cs file, and create a new file in the PluginBase folder named ICommand.cs with the following interface definition:

namespace PluginBase
{
    public interface ICommand
    {
        string Name { get; }
        string Description { get; }

        int Execute();
    }
}

This ICommand interface is the interface that all of the plugins will implement.

Now that the ICommand interface is defined, the application project can be filled in a little more. Add a reference from the AppWithPlugin project to the PluginBase project with the dotnet add AppWithPlugin/AppWithPlugin.csproj reference PluginBase/PluginBase.csproj command from the root folder.

Replace the // Load commands from plugins comment with the following code snippet to enable it to load plugins from given file paths:

string[] pluginPaths = new string[]
{
    // Paths to plugins to load.
};

IEnumerable<ICommand> commands = pluginPaths.SelectMany(pluginPath =>
{
    Assembly pluginAssembly = LoadPlugin(pluginPath);
    return CreateCommands(pluginAssembly);
}).ToList();

Then replace the // Output the loaded commands comment with the following code snippet:

foreach (ICommand command in commands)
{
    Console.WriteLine($"{command.Name}\t - {command.Description}");
}

Replace the // Execute the command with the name passed as an argument comment with the following snippet:

ICommand command = commands.FirstOrDefault(c => c.Name == commandName);
if (command == null)
{
    Console.WriteLine("No such command is known.");
    return;
}

command.Execute();

And finally, add static methods to the Program class named LoadPlugin and CreateCommands, as shown here:

static Assembly LoadPlugin(string relativePath)
{
    throw new NotImplementedException();
}

static IEnumerable<ICommand> CreateCommands(Assembly assembly)
{
    int count = 0;

    foreach (Type type in assembly.GetTypes())
    {
        if (typeof(ICommand).IsAssignableFrom(type))
        {
            ICommand result = Activator.CreateInstance(type) as ICommand;
            if (result != null)
            {
                count++;
                yield return result;
            }
        }
    }

    if (count == 0)
    {
        string availableTypes = string.Join(",", assembly.GetTypes().Select(t => t.FullName));
        throw new ApplicationException(
            $"Can't find any type which implements ICommand in {assembly} from {assembly.Location}.\n" +
            $"Available types: {availableTypes}");
    }
}

Load plugins

Now the application can correctly load and instantiate commands from loaded plugin assemblies, but it's still unable to load the plugin assemblies. Create a file named PluginLoadContext.cs in the AppWithPlugin folder with the following contents:

using System;
using System.Reflection;
using System.Runtime.Loader;

namespace AppWithPlugin
{
    class PluginLoadContext : AssemblyLoadContext
    {
        private AssemblyDependencyResolver _resolver;

        public PluginLoadContext(string pluginPath)
        {
            _resolver = new AssemblyDependencyResolver(pluginPath);
        }

        protected override Assembly Load(AssemblyName assemblyName)
        {
            string assemblyPath = _resolver.ResolveAssemblyToPath(assemblyName);
            if (assemblyPath != null)
            {
                return LoadFromAssemblyPath(assemblyPath);
            }

            return null;
        }

        protected override IntPtr LoadUnmanagedDll(string unmanagedDllName)
        {
            string libraryPath = _resolver.ResolveUnmanagedDllToPath(unmanagedDllName);
            if (libraryPath != null)
            {
                return LoadUnmanagedDllFromPath(libraryPath);
            }

            return IntPtr.Zero;
        }
    }
}

The PluginLoadContext type derives from AssemblyLoadContext. The AssemblyLoadContext type is a special type in the runtime that allows developers to isolate loaded assemblies into different groups to ensure that assembly versions don't conflict. Additionally, a custom AssemblyLoadContext can choose different paths to load assemblies from and override the default behavior. The PluginLoadContext uses an instance of the AssemblyDependencyResolver type introduced in .NET Core 3.0 to resolve assembly names to paths. The AssemblyDependencyResolver object is constructed with the path to a .NET class library. It resolves assemblies and native libraries to their relative paths based on the .deps.json file for the class library whose path was passed to the AssemblyDependencyResolver constructor. The custom AssemblyLoadContext enables plugins to have their own dependencies, and the AssemblyDependencyResolver makes it easy to correctly load the dependencies.

Now that the AppWithPlugin project has the PluginLoadContext type, update the Program.LoadPlugin method with the following body:

static Assembly LoadPlugin(string relativePath)
{
    // Navigate up to the solution root
    string root = Path.GetFullPath(Path.Combine(
        Path.GetDirectoryName(
            Path.GetDirectoryName(
                Path.GetDirectoryName(
                    Path.GetDirectoryName(
                        Path.GetDirectoryName(typeof(Program).Assembly.Location)))))));

    string pluginLocation = Path.GetFullPath(Path.Combine(root, relativePath.Replace('\\', Path.DirectorySeparatorChar)));
    Console.WriteLine($"Loading commands from: {pluginLocation}");
    PluginLoadContext loadContext = new PluginLoadContext(pluginLocation);
    return loadContext.LoadFromAssemblyName(new AssemblyName(Path.GetFileNameWithoutExtension(pluginLocation)));
}

By using a different PluginLoadContext instance for each plugin, the plugins can have different or even conflicting dependencies without issue.

Simple plugin with no dependencies

Back in the root folder, do the following:

  1. Run the following command to create a new class library project named HelloPlugin:

    dotnet new classlib -o HelloPlugin
    
  2. Run the following command to add the project to the AppWithPlugin solution:

    dotnet sln add HelloPlugin/HelloPlugin.csproj
    
  3. Replace the HelloPlugin/Class1.cs file with a file named HelloCommand.cs with the following contents:

using PluginBase;
using System;

namespace HelloPlugin
{
    public class HelloCommand : ICommand
    {
        public string Name { get => "hello"; }
        public string Description { get => "Displays hello message."; }

        public int Execute()
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Hello !!!");
            return 0;
        }
    }
}

Now, open the HelloPlugin.csproj file. It should look similar to the following:

<Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk">

  <PropertyGroup>
    <TargetFramework>net5.0</TargetFramework>
  </PropertyGroup>

</Project>

In between the <PropertyGroup> tags, add the following element:

  <EnableDynamicLoading>true</EnableDynamicLoading>

The <EnableDynamicLoading>true</EnableDynamicLoading> prepares the project so that it can be used as a plugin. Among other things, this will copy all of its dependencies to the output of the project. For more details see EnableDynamicLoading.

In between the <Project> tags, add the following elements:

<ItemGroup>
    <ProjectReference Include="..\PluginBase\PluginBase.csproj">
        <Private>false</Private>
        <ExcludeAssets>runtime</ExcludeAssets>
    </ProjectReference>
</ItemGroup>

The <Private>false</Private> element is important. This tells MSBuild to not copy PluginBase.dll to the output directory for HelloPlugin. If the PluginBase.dll assembly is present in the output directory, PluginLoadContext will find the assembly there and load it when it loads the HelloPlugin.dll assembly. At this point, the HelloPlugin.HelloCommand type will implement the ICommand interface from the PluginBase.dll in the output directory of the HelloPlugin project, not the ICommand interface that is loaded into the default load context. Since the runtime sees these two types as different types from different assemblies, the AppWithPlugin.Program.CreateCommands method won't find the commands. As a result, the <Private>false</Private> metadata is required for the reference to the assembly containing the plugin interfaces.

Similarly, the <ExcludeAssets>runtime</ExcludeAssets> element is also important if the PluginBase references other packages. This setting has the same effect as <Private>false</Private> but works on package references that the PluginBase project or one of its dependencies may include.

Now that the HelloPlugin project is complete, you should update the AppWithPlugin project to know where the HelloPlugin plugin can be found. After the // Paths to plugins to load comment, add @"HelloPlugin\bin\Debug\net5.0\HelloPlugin.dll" (this path could be different based on the .NET Core version you use) as an element of the pluginPaths array.

Plugin with library dependencies

Almost all plugins are more complex than a simple "Hello World", and many plugins have dependencies on other libraries. The JsonPlugin and OldJsonPlugin projects in the sample show two examples of plugins with NuGet package dependencies on Newtonsoft.Json. Because of this, all plugin projects should add <EnableDynamicLoading>true</EnableDynamicLoading> to the project properties so that they copy all of their dependencies to the output of dotnet build. Publishing the class library with dotnet publish will also copy all of its dependencies to the publish output.

Other examples in the sample

The complete source code for this tutorial can be found in the dotnet/samples repository. The completed sample includes a few other examples of AssemblyDependencyResolver behavior. For example, the AssemblyDependencyResolver object can also resolve native libraries as well as localized satellite assemblies included in NuGet packages. The UVPlugin and FrenchPlugin in the samples repository demonstrate these scenarios.

Reference a plugin interface from a NuGet package

Let's say that there is an app A that has a plugin interface defined in the NuGet package named A.PluginBase. How do you reference the package correctly in your plugin project? For project references, using the <Private>false</Private> metadata on the ProjectReference element in the project file prevented the dll from being copied to the output.

To correctly reference the A.PluginBase package, you want to change the <PackageReference> element in the project file to the following:

<PackageReference Include="A.PluginBase" Version="1.0.0">
    <ExcludeAssets>runtime</ExcludeAssets>
</PackageReference>

This prevents the A.PluginBase assemblies from being copied to the output directory of your plugin and ensures that your plugin will use A's version of A.PluginBase.

Plugin target framework recommendations

Because plugin dependency loading uses the .deps.json file, there is a gotcha related to the plugin's target framework. Specifically, your plugins should target a runtime, such as .NET 5, instead of a version of .NET Standard. The .deps.json file is generated based on which framework the project targets, and since many .NET Standard-compatible packages ship reference assemblies for building against .NET Standard and implementation assemblies for specific runtimes, the .deps.json may not correctly see implementation assemblies, or it may grab the .NET Standard version of an assembly instead of the .NET Core version you expect.

Plugin framework references

Currently, plugins can't introduce new frameworks into the process. For example, you can't load a plugin that uses the Microsoft.AspNetCore.App framework into an application that only uses the root Microsoft.NETCore.App framework. The host application must declare references to all frameworks needed by plugins.