Overview of .NET source code analysis
.NET compiler platform (Roslyn) analyzers inspect your C# or Visual Basic code for code quality and style issues. Starting in .NET 5, these analyzers are included with the .NET SDK and you don't need to install them separately. If your project targets .NET 5 or later, code analysis is enabled by default. If your project targets a different .NET implementation, for example, .NET Core, .NET Standard, or .NET Framework, you must manually enable code analysis by setting the EnableNETAnalyzers property to true
.
If you don't want to move to the .NET 5+ SDK, have a non-SDK-style .NET Framework project, or prefer a NuGet package-based model, the analyzers are also available in the Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.NetAnalyzers NuGet package. You might prefer a package-based model for on-demand version updates.
Note
.NET analyzers are target-framework agnostic. That is, your project does not need to target a specific .NET implementation. The analyzers work for projects that target .NET 5+ as well as earlier .NET versions, such as .NET Core 3.1 and .NET Framework 4.7.2. However, to enable code analysis using the EnableNETAnalyzers property, your project must reference a project SDK.
If rule violations are found by an analyzer, they're reported as a suggestion, warning, or error, depending on how each rule is configured. Code analysis violations appear with the prefix "CA" or "IDE" to differentiate them from compiler errors.
Code quality analysis
Code quality analysis ("CAxxxx") rules inspect your C# or Visual Basic code for security, performance, design and other issues. Analysis is enabled, by default, for projects that target .NET 5 or later. You can enable code analysis on projects that target earlier .NET versions by setting the EnableNETAnalyzers property to true
. You can also disable code analysis for your project by setting EnableNETAnalyzers
to false
.
Tip
If you're using Visual Studio, many analyzer rules have associated code fixes that you can apply to correct the problem. Code fixes are shown in the light bulb icon menu.
Enabled rules
The following rules are enabled, by default, as errors or warnings in .NET 8. Additional rules are enabled as suggestions.
Diagnostic ID | Category | Severity | Version added | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
CA1416 | Interoperability | Warning | .NET 5 | Validate platform compatibility |
CA1417 | Interoperability | Warning | .NET 5 | Do not use OutAttribute on string parameters for P/Invokes |
CA1418 | Interoperability | Warning | .NET 6 | Use valid platform string |
CA1420 | Interoperability | Warning | .NET 7 | Using features that require runtime marshalling when it's disabled will result in run-time exceptions |
CA1422 | Interoperability | Warning | .NET 7 | Validate platform compatibility |
CA1831 | Performance | Warning | .NET 5 | Use AsSpan instead of range-based indexers for string when appropriate |
CA1856 | Performance | Error | .NET 8 | Incorrect usage of ConstantExpected attribute |
CA1857 | Performance | Warning | .NET 8 | A constant is expected for the parameter |
CA2013 | Reliability | Warning | .NET 5 | Do not use ReferenceEquals with value types |
CA2014 | Reliability | Warning | .NET 5 | Do not use stackalloc in loops |
CA2015 | Reliability | Warning | .NET 5 | Do not define finalizers for types derived from MemoryManager<T> |
CA2017 | Reliability | Warning | .NET 6 | Parameter count mismatch |
CA2018 | Reliability | Warning | .NET 6 | The count argument to Buffer.BlockCopy should specify the number of bytes to copy |
CA2021 | Reliability | Warning | .NET 8 | Do not call Enumerable.Cast<T> or Enumerable.OfType<T> with incompatible types |
CA2022 | Reliability | Warning | .NET 9 | Avoid inexact read with Stream.Read |
CA2200 | Usage | Warning | .NET 5 | Rethrow to preserve stack details |
CA2247 | Usage | Warning | .NET 5 | Argument passed to TaskCompletionSource constructor should be TaskCreationOptions enum instead of TaskContinuationOptions |
CA2252 | Usage | Error | .NET 6 | Opt in to preview features |
CA2255 | Usage | Warning | .NET 6 | The ModuleInitializer attribute should not be used in libraries |
CA2256 | Usage | Warning | .NET 6 | All members declared in parent interfaces must have an implementation in a DynamicInterfaceCastableImplementation -attributed interface |
CA2257 | Usage | Warning | .NET 6 | Members defined on an interface with the DynamicInterfaceCastableImplementationAttribute should be static |
CA2258 | Usage | Warning | .NET 6 | Providing a DynamicInterfaceCastableImplementation interface in Visual Basic is unsupported |
CA2259 | Usage | Warning | .NET 7 | ThreadStatic only affects static fields |
CA2260 | Usage | Warning | .NET 7 | Use correct type parameter |
CA2261 | Usage | Warning | .NET 8 | Do not use ConfigureAwaitOptions.SuppressThrowing with Task<TResult> |
You can change the severity of these rules to disable them or elevate them to errors. You can also enable more rules.
- For a list of rules that are included with each .NET SDK version, see Analyzer releases.
- For a list of all the code quality rules, see Code quality rules.
Enable additional rules
Analysis mode refers to a predefined code analysis configuration where none, some, or all rules are enabled. In the default analysis mode (Default
), only a small number of rules are enabled as build warnings. You can change the analysis mode for your project by setting the <AnalysisMode>
property in the project file. The allowable values are:
Value | Description |
---|---|
None |
All rules are disabled. You can selectively opt in to individual rules to enable them. |
Default |
Default mode, where certain rules are enabled as build warnings, certain rules are enabled as Visual Studio IDE suggestions, and the remainder are disabled. |
Minimum |
More aggressive mode than Default mode. Certain suggestions that are highly recommended for build enforcement are enabled as build warnings. To see which rules this includes, inspect the %ProgramFiles%/dotnet/sdk/[version]/Sdks/Microsoft.NET.Sdk/analyzers/build/config/analysislevel_[level]_minimum.editorconfig file. |
Recommended |
More aggressive mode than Minimum mode, where more rules are enabled as build warnings. To see which rules this includes, inspect the %ProgramFiles%/dotnet/sdk/[version]/Sdks/Microsoft.NET.Sdk/analyzers/build/config/analysislevel_[level]_recommended.editorconfig file. |
All |
All rules are enabled as build warnings*. You can selectively opt out of individual rules to disable them. * The following rules are not enabled by setting AnalysisMode to All or by setting AnalysisLevel to latest-all : CA1017, CA1045, CA1005, CA1014, CA1060, CA1021, and the code metrics analyzer rules (CA1501, CA1502, CA1505, CA1506, and CA1509). These legacy rules might be deprecated in a future version. However, you can still enable them individually using a dotnet_diagnostic.CAxxxx.severity = <severity> entry. |
Starting in .NET 6, you can omit <AnalysisMode>
in favor of a compound value for the <AnalysisLevel>
property. For example, the following value enables the recommended set of rules for the latest release: <AnalysisLevel>latest-Recommended</AnalysisLevel>
. For more information, see AnalysisLevel
.
To find the default severity for each available rule and whether or not the rule is enabled in Default
analysis mode, see the full list of rules.
Treat warnings as errors
If you use the -warnaserror
flag when you build your projects, all code analysis warnings are also treated as errors. If you do not want code quality warnings (CAxxxx) to be treated as errors in presence of -warnaserror
, you can set the CodeAnalysisTreatWarningsAsErrors
MSBuild property to false
in your project file.
<PropertyGroup>
<CodeAnalysisTreatWarningsAsErrors>false</CodeAnalysisTreatWarningsAsErrors>
</PropertyGroup>
You'll still see any code analysis warnings, but they won't break your build.
Latest updates
By default, you'll get the latest code analysis rules and default rule severities as you upgrade to newer versions of the .NET SDK. If you don't want this behavior, for example, if you want to ensure that no new rules are enabled or disabled, you can override it in one of the following ways:
Set the
AnalysisLevel
MSBuild property to a specific value to lock the warnings to that set. When you upgrade to a newer SDK, you'll still get bug fixes for those warnings, but no new warnings will be enabled and no existing warnings will be disabled. For example, to lock the set of rules to those that ship with version 5.0 of the .NET SDK, add the following entry to your project file.<PropertyGroup> <AnalysisLevel>5.0</AnalysisLevel> </PropertyGroup>
Tip
The default value for the
AnalysisLevel
property islatest
, which means you always get the latest code analysis rules as you move to newer versions of the .NET SDK.For more information, and to see a list of possible values, see AnalysisLevel.
Install the Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.NetAnalyzers NuGet package to decouple rule updates from .NET SDK updates. For projects that target .NET 5+, installing the package turns off the built-in SDK analyzers. You'll get a build warning if the SDK contains a newer analyzer assembly version than that of the NuGet package. To disable the warning, set the
_SkipUpgradeNetAnalyzersNuGetWarning
property totrue
.Note
If you install the Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.NetAnalyzers NuGet package, you should not add the EnableNETAnalyzers property to either your project file or a Directory.Build.props file. When the NuGet package is installed and the
EnableNETAnalyzers
property is set totrue
, a build warning is generated.
Code-style analysis
Code-style analysis ("IDExxxx") rules enable you to define and maintain consistent code style in your codebase. The default enablement settings are:
Command-line build: Code-style analysis is disabled, by default, for all .NET projects on command-line builds.
Starting in .NET 5, you can enable code-style analysis on build, both at the command line and inside Visual Studio. Code style violations appear as warnings or errors with an "IDE" prefix. This enables you to enforce consistent code styles at build time.
Visual Studio: Code-style analysis is enabled, by default, for all .NET projects inside Visual Studio as code refactoring quick actions.
For a full list of code-style analysis rules, see Code style rules.
Enable on build
With the .NET 5 SDK and later versions, you can enable code-style analysis when building from the command-line and in Visual Studio. (However, for performance reasons, a handful of code-style rules will still apply only in the Visual Studio IDE.)
Follow these steps to enable code-style analysis on build:
Set the MSBuild property EnforceCodeStyleInBuild to
true
.In an .editorconfig file, configure each "IDE" code style rule that you wish to run on build as a warning or an error. For example:
[*.{cs,vb}] # IDE0040: Accessibility modifiers required (escalated to a build warning) dotnet_diagnostic.IDE0040.severity = warning
Tip
Starting in .NET 9, you can also use the option format to specify a severity and have it be respected at build time. For example:
[*.{cs,vb}] # IDE0040: Accessibility modifiers required (escalated to a build warning) dotnet_style_require_accessibility_modifiers = always:warning
Alternatively, you can configure an entire category to be a warning or error, by default, and then selectively turn off rules in that category that you don't want to run on build. For example:
[*.{cs,vb}] # Default severity for analyzer diagnostics with category 'Style' (escalated to build warnings) dotnet_analyzer_diagnostic.category-Style.severity = warning # IDE0040: Accessibility modifiers required (disabled on build) dotnet_diagnostic.IDE0040.severity = silent
Suppress a warning
One way to suppress a rule violation is to set the severity option for that rule ID to none
in an EditorConfig file. For example:
dotnet_diagnostic.CA1822.severity = none
For more information and other ways to suppress warnings, see How to suppress code analysis warnings.
Third-party analyzers
In addition to the official .NET analyzers, you can also install third party analyzers, such as StyleCop, Roslynator, XUnit Analyzers, and Sonar Analyzer.