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Retargeting changes for migration to .NET Framework 4.7.x

This article lists the app compatibility issues that were introduced in .NET Framework 4.7, 4.7.1, and 4.7.2.

.NET Framework 4.7

ASP.NET

HttpRuntime.AppDomainAppPath Throws a NullReferenceException

Details

In the .NET Framework 4.6.2, the runtime throws a T:System.NullReferenceException when retrieving a P:System.Web.HttpRuntime.AppDomainAppPath value that includes null characters.In the .NET Framework 4.6.1 and earlier versions, the runtime throws an T:System.ArgumentNullException.

Suggestion

You can do either of the follow to respond to this change:

  • Handle the T:System.NullReferenceException if you application is running on the .NET Framework 4.6.2.
  • Upgrade to the .NET Framework 4.7, which restores the previous behavior and throws an T:System.ArgumentNullException.
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.6.2
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

Throttle concurrent requests per session

Details

In the .NET Framework 4.6.2 and earlier, ASP.NET executes requests with the same Sessionid sequentially, and ASP.NET always issues the Sessionid through cookies by default. If a page takes a long time to respond, it will significantly degrade server performance just by pressing F5 on the browser. In the fix, we added a counter to track the queued requests and terminate the requests when they exceed a specified limit. The default value is 50. If the limit is reached, a warning will be logged in the event log, and an HTTP 500 response may be recorded in the IIS log.

Suggestion

To restore the old behavior, you can add the following setting to your web.config file to opt out of the new behavior.

<appSettings>
    <add key="aspnet:RequestQueueLimitPerSession" value="2147483647"/>
</appSettings>
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7
Type Retargeting

Networking

Default value of ServicePointManager.SecurityProtocol is SecurityProtocolType.System.Default

Details

Starting with apps that target the .NET Framework 4.7, the default value of the ServicePointManager.SecurityProtocol property is SecurityProtocolType.SystemDefault. This change allows .NET Framework networking APIs based on SslStream (such as FTP, HTTPS, and SMTP) to inherit the default security protocols from the operating system instead of using hard-coded values defined by the .NET Framework. The default varies by operating system and any custom configuration performed by the system administrator. For information on the default SChannel protocol in each version of the Windows operating system, see Protocols in TLS/SSL (Schannel SSP).

For applications that target an earlier version of the .NET Framework, the default value of the ServicePointManager.SecurityProtocol property depends on the version of the .NET Framework targeted. See the Networking section of Retargeting Changes for Migration from .NET Framework 4.5.2 to 4.6 for more information.

Suggestion

This change affects applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7 or later versions. If you prefer to use a defined protocol rather than relying on the system default, you can explicitly set the value of the ServicePointManager.SecurityProtocol property. If this change is undesirable, you can opt out of it by adding a configuration setting to the <runtime> section of your application configuration file. The following example shows both the <runtime> section and the Switch.System.Net.DontEnableSystemDefaultTlsVersions opt-out switch:

<runtime>
  <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Net.DontEnableSystemDefaultTlsVersions=true" />
</runtime>
Name Value
Scope Minor
Version 4.7
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

SslStream supports TLS Alerts

Details

After a failed TLS handshake, an System.IO.IOException with an inner System.ComponentModel.Win32Exception exception will be thrown by the first I/O Read/Write operation. The System.ComponentModel.Win32Exception.NativeErrorCode code for the System.ComponentModel.Win32Exception can be mapped to the TLS Alert from the remote party using the Schannel error codes for TLS and SSL alerts.For more information, see RFC 2246: Section 7.2.2 Error alerts.
The behavior in .NET Framework 4.6.2 and earlier is that the transport channel (usually TCP connection) will timeout during either Write or Read if the other party failed the handshake and immediately afterwards rejected the connection.

Suggestion

Applications calling network I/O APIs such as Read(Byte[], Int32, Int32)/Write(Byte[], Int32, Int32) should handle IOException or System.TimeoutException.
The TLS Alerts feature is enabled by default starting with .NET Framework 4.7. Applications targeting versions of the .NET Framework from 4.0 through 4.6.2 running on a .NET Framework 4.7 or higher system will have the feature disabled to preserve compatibility.
The following configuration API is available to enable or disable the feature for .NET Framework 4.6 and later applications running on .NET Framework 4.7 or later.

  • Programmatically: Must be the very first thing the application does since ServicePointManager will initialize only once:

    AppContext.SetSwitch("TestSwitch.LocalAppContext.DisableCaching", true);
    
    // Set to 'false' to enable the feature in .NET Framework 4.6 - 4.6.2.
    AppContext.SetSwitch("Switch.System.Net.DontEnableTlsAlerts", true);
    
  • AppConfig:

    <runtime>
      <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Net.DontEnableTlsAlerts=true"/>
      <!-- Set to 'false' to enable the feature in .NET Framework 4.6 - 4.6.2. -->
    </runtime>
    
  • Registry key (machine global): Set the Value to false to enable the feature in .NET Framework 4.6 - 4.6.2.

    Key: HKLM\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\.NETFramework\AppContext\Switch.System.Net.DontEnableTlsAlerts
    - Type: String
    - Value: "true"
    
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

Security

CspParameters.ParentWindowHandle now expects HWND value

Details

The ParentWindowHandle value, introduced in .NET Framework 2.0, allows an application to register a parent window handle value such that any UI required to access the key (such as a PIN prompt or consent dialog) opens as a modal child to the specified window.Starting with apps that target the .NET Framework 4.7, a Windows Forms application can set the ParentWindowHandle property with code like the following:

cspParameters.ParentWindowHandle = form.Handle;

In previous versions of the .NET Framework, the value was expected to be an System.IntPtr representing a location in memory where the HWND value resided. Setting the property to form.Handle on Windows 7 and earlier versions had no effect, but on Windows 8 and later versions, it results in a "System.Security.Cryptography.CryptographicException: The parameter is incorrect."

Suggestion

Applications targeting .NET Framework 4.7 or higher wishing to register a parent window relationship are encouraged to use the simplified form:

cspParameters.ParentWindowHandle = form.Handle;

Users who had identified that the correct value to pass was the address of a memory location which held the value form.Handle can opt out of the behavior change by setting the AppContext switch Switch.System.Security.Cryptography.DoNotAddrOfCspParentWindowHandle to true:

  • By programmatically setting compat switches on the AppContext, as explained here.
  • By adding the following line to the <runtime> section of the app.config file:
<runtime>
 <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Security.Cryptography.DoNotAddrOfCspParentWindowHandle=true"/>
</runtime>

Conversely, users who wish to opt in to the new behavior on the .NET Framework 4.7 runtime when the application loads under older .NET Framework versions can set the AppContext switch to false.

Name Value
Scope Minor
Version 4.7
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

SslStream supports TLS Alerts

Details

After a failed TLS handshake, an System.IO.IOException with an inner System.ComponentModel.Win32Exception exception will be thrown by the first I/O Read/Write operation. The System.ComponentModel.Win32Exception.NativeErrorCode code for the System.ComponentModel.Win32Exception can be mapped to the TLS Alert from the remote party using the Schannel error codes for TLS and SSL alerts.For more information, see RFC 2246: Section 7.2.2 Error alerts.
The behavior in .NET Framework 4.6.2 and earlier is that the transport channel (usually TCP connection) will timeout during either Write or Read if the other party failed the handshake and immediately afterwards rejected the connection.

Suggestion

Applications calling network I/O APIs such as Read(Byte[], Int32, Int32)/Write(Byte[], Int32, Int32) should handle IOException or System.TimeoutException.
The TLS Alerts feature is enabled by default starting with .NET Framework 4.7. Applications targeting versions of the .NET Framework from 4.0 through 4.6.2 running on a .NET Framework 4.7 or higher system will have the feature disabled to preserve compatibility.
The following configuration API is available to enable or disable the feature for .NET Framework 4.6 and later applications running on .NET Framework 4.7 or later.

  • Programmatically: Must be the very first thing the application does since ServicePointManager will initialize only once:

    AppContext.SetSwitch("TestSwitch.LocalAppContext.DisableCaching", true);
    
    // Set to 'false' to enable the feature in .NET Framework 4.6 - 4.6.2.
    AppContext.SetSwitch("Switch.System.Net.DontEnableTlsAlerts", true);
    
  • AppConfig:

    <runtime>
      <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Net.DontEnableTlsAlerts=true"/>
      <!-- Set to 'false' to enable the feature in .NET Framework 4.6 - 4.6.2. -->
    </runtime>
    
  • Registry key (machine global): Set the Value to false to enable the feature in .NET Framework 4.6 - 4.6.2.

    Key: HKLM\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\.NETFramework\AppContext\Switch.System.Net.DontEnableTlsAlerts
    - Type: String
    - Value: "true"
    
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

Windows Communication Foundation (WCF)

Serialization of control characters with DataContractJsonSerializer is now compatible with ECMAScript V6 and V8

Details

In .NET Framework 4.6.2 and earlier versions, the System.Runtime.Serialization.Json.DataContractJsonSerializer did not serialize some special control characters, such as \b, \f, and \t, in a way that was compatible with the ECMAScript V6 and V8 standards. Starting with .NET Framework 4.7, serialization of these control characters is compatible with ECMAScript V6 and V8.

Suggestion

For apps that target the .NET Framework 4.7, this feature is enabled by default. If this behavior is not desirable, you can opt out of this feature by adding the following line to the <runtime> section of the app.config or web.config file:

<runtime>
  <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Runtime.Serialization.DoNotUseECMAScriptV6EscapeControlCharacter=false" />
</runtime>
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

WCF message security now is able to use TLS1.1 and TLS1.2

Details

Starting in the .NET Framework 4.7, customers can configure either TLS1.1 or TLS1.2 in WCF message security in addition to SSL3.0 and TLS1.0 through application configuration settings.

Suggestion

In the .NET Framework 4.7, support for TLS1.1 and TLS1.2 in WCF message security is disabled by default. You can enable it by adding the following line to the <runtime> section of the app.config or web.config file:

<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.ServiceModel.DisableUsingServicePointManagerSecurityProtocols=false;Switch.System.Net.DontEnableSchUseStrongCrypto=false" />
</runtime>
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7
Type Retargeting

Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF)

Calls to System.Windows.Input.PenContext.Disable on touch-enabled systems may throw an ArgumentException

Details

Under some circumstances, calls to the internal System.Windows.Intput.PenContext.Disable method on touch-enabled systems may throw an unhandled T:System.ArgumentException because of reentrancy.

Suggestion

This issue has been addressed in the .NET Framework 4.7. To prevent the exception, upgrade to a version of the .NET Framework starting with the .NET Framework 4.7.

Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.6.1
Type Retargeting

NullReferenceException in exception handling code from ImageSourceConverter.ConvertFrom

Details

An error in the exception handling code for ConvertFrom(ITypeDescriptorContext, CultureInfo, Object) caused an incorrect System.NullReferenceException to be thrown instead of the intended exception ( System.IO.DirectoryNotFoundException or System.IO.FileNotFoundException). This change corrects that error so that the method now throws the right exception.

By default all applications targeting .NET Framework 4.6.2 and earlier continue to throw System.NullReferenceException for compatibility. Developers targeting .NET Framework 4.7 and above should see the right exceptions.

Suggestion

Developers who wish to revert to getting System.NullReferenceException when targeting .NET Framework 4.7 or later can add/merge the following to their application's App.config file:

<configuration>
<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Windows.Media.ImageSourceConverter.OverrideExceptionWithNullReferenceException=true"/>
</runtime>
</configuration>
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

WPF Grid allocation of space to star-columns

Details

Starting with .NET Framework 4.7, WPF replaces the algorithm that Grid uses to allocate space to *-columns. This will change the actual width assigned to *-columns in a number of cases:

  • When one or more *-columns also have a minimum or maximum width that overrides the proportional allocation for that column. (The minimum width can derive from an explicit MinWidth declaration, or from an implicit minimum obtained from the column's content. The maximum width can only be defined explicitly, from a MaxWidth declaration.)
  • When one or more *-columns declare an extremely large *-weight, greater than 10^298.
  • When the *-weights are sufficiently different to encounter floating-point instability (overflow, underflow, loss of precision).
  • When layout rounding is enabled, and the effective display DPI is sufficiently high. In the first two cases, the widths produced by the new algorithm can be significantly different from those produced by the old algorithm; in the last case, the difference will be at most one or two pixels.

The new algorithm fixes several bugs present in the old algorithm:

  • Total allocation to columns can exceed the Grid's width. This can occur when allocating space to a column whose proportional share is less than its minimum size. The algorithm allocates the minimum size, which decreases the space available to other columns. If there are no *-columns left to allocate, the total allocation will be too large.

  • Total allocation can fall short of the Grid's width. This is the dual problem to #1, arising when allocating to a column whose proportional share is greater than its maximum size, with no *-columns left to take up the slack.

  • Two *-columns can receive allocations not proportional to their *-weights. This is a milder version of #1/#2, arising when allocating to *-columns A, B, and C (in that order), where B's proportional share violates its min (or max) constraint. As above, this changes the space available to column C, who gets less (or more) proportional allocation than A did.

  • Columns with extremely large weights (> 10^298) are all treated as if they had weight 10^298. Proportional differences between them (and between columns with slightly smaller weights) are not honored.

  • Columns with infinite weights are not handled correctly. (Actually you can't set a weight to Infinity, but this is an artificial restriction. The allocation code was trying to handle it, but doing a bad job.)

  • Several minor problems while avoiding overflow, underflow, loss of precision, and similar floating-point issues.

  • Adjustments for layout rounding are incorrect at sufficiently high DPI. The new algorithm produces results that meet the following criteria:

    • The actual width assigned to a *-column is never less than its minimum width nor greater than its maximum width.
    • Each *-column that's not assigned its minimum or maximum width is assigned a width proportional to its *-weight. To be precise, if two columns are declared with width x* and y* respectively, and if neither column receives its minimum or maximum width, the actual widths v and w assigned to the columns are in the same proportion: v / w == x / y.
    • The total width allocated to "proportional" *-columns is equal to the space available after allocating to the constrained columns (fixed, auto, and *-columns that are allocated their min or max width). This might be zero, for instance if the sum of the minimum widths exceeds the Grid's available width.
    • All these statements are to be interpreted with respect to the "ideal" layout. When layout rounding is in effect, the actual widths can differ from the ideal widths by as much as one pixel.

Note

Everything said about columns and widths in this article applies to rows and heights as well.

Suggestion

By default, apps that target versions of the .NET Framework starting with the .NET Framework 4.7 will see the new algorithm, while apps that target the .NET Framework 4.6.2 or earlier versions will see the old algorithm.

To override the default, use the following configuration setting:

<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Windows.Controls.Grid.StarDefinitionsCanExceedAvailableSpace=true" />
</runtime>

The value true selects the old algorithm, false selects the new algorithm.

Name Value
Scope Minor
Version 4.7
Type Retargeting

WPF Pointer-Based Touch Stack

Details

This change adds the ability to enable an optional WM_POINTER based WPF touch/stylus stack. Developers that do not explicitly enable this should see no change in WPF touch/stylus behavior.Current Known Issues With optional WM_POINTER based touch/stylus stack:

  • No support for real-time inking.
  • While inking and StylusPlugins will still work, they will be processed on the UI Thread which can lead to poor performance.
  • Behavioral changes due to changes in promotion from touch/stylus events to mouse events
  • Manipulation may behave differently
  • Drag/Drop will not show appropriate feedback for touch input
  • This does not affect stylus input
  • Drag/Drop can no longer be initiated on touch/stylus events
  • This can potentially cause the application to stop responding until mouse input is detected.
  • Instead, developers should initiate drag and drop from mouse events.

Suggestion

Developers who wish to enable this stack can add/merge the following to their application's App.config file:

<configuration>
<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Windows.Input.Stylus.EnablePointerSupport=true"/>
</runtime>
</configuration>

Removing this or setting the value to false will turn this optional stack off.Note that this stack is available only on Windows 10 Creators Update and above.

Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7
Type Retargeting

Windows Workflow Foundation (WF)

Workflow checksums changed from MD5 to SHA1

Details

To support debugging with Visual Studio, the Workflow runtime generates a checksum for a workflow instance using a hashing algorithm. In the .NET Framework 4.6.2 and earlier versions, workflow checksum hashing used the MD5 algorithm, which caused issues on FIPS-enabled systems. Starting with the .NET Framework 4.7, the algorithm is SHA1. If your code has persisted these checksums, they will be incompatible.

Suggestion

If your code is unable to load workflow instances due to a checksum failure, try setting the AppContext switch "Switch.System.Activities.UseMD5ForWFDebugger" to true.In code:

System.AppContext.SetSwitch("Switch.System.Activities.UseMD5ForWFDebugger", true);

Or in configuration:

<configuration>
  <runtime>
    <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Activities.UseMD5ForWFDebugger=true" />
  </runtime>
</configuration>
Name Value
Scope Minor
Version 4.7
Type Retargeting

.NET Framework 4.7.1

ASP.NET

ASP.NET Accessibility Improvements in .NET Framework 4.7.1

Details

Starting with the .NET Framework 4.7.1, ASP.NET has improved how ASP.NET Web Controls work with accessibility technology in Visual Studio to better support ASP.NET customers. These include the following changes:

  • Changes to implement missing UI accessibility patterns in controls, like the Add Field dialog in the Details View wizard, or the Configure ListView dialog of the ListView wizard.
  • Changes to improve the display in High Contrast mode, like the Data Pager Fields Editor.
  • Changes to improve the keyboard navigation experiences for controls, like the Fields dialog in the Edit Pager Fields wizard of the DataPager control, the Configure ObjectContext dialog, or the Configure Data Selection dialog of the Configure Data Source wizard.

Suggestion

How to opt in or out of these changes In order for the Visual Studio Designer to benefit from these changes, it must run on the .NET Framework 4.7.1 or later. The web application can benefit from these changes in either of the following ways:

  • Install Visual Studio 2017 15.3 or later, which supports the new accessibility features with the following AppContext Switch by default.
  • Opt out of the legacy accessibility behaviors by adding the Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures AppContext switch to the <runtime> section in the devenv.exe.config file and setting it to false, as the following example shows.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<configuration>
<runtime>
...
<!-- AppContextSwitchOverrides value attribute is in the form of 'key1=true/false;key2=true/false'  -->
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures=false" />
...
</runtime>
</configuration>

Applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7.1 or later and want to preserve the legacy accessibility behavior can opt in to the use of legacy accessibility features by explicitly setting this AppContext switch to true.

Name Value
Scope Minor
Version 4.7.1
Type Retargeting

Core

SerialPort background thread exceptions

Details

Background threads created with SerialPort streams no longer terminate the process when OS exceptions are thrown.
In applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7 and earlier versions, a process is terminated when an operating system exception is thrown on a background thread created with a SerialPort stream.
In applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7.1 or a later version, background threads wait for OS events related to the active serial port and could crash in some cases, such as sudden removal of the serial port.

Suggestion

For apps that target the .NET Framework 4.7.1, you can opt out of the exception handling if it is not desirable by adding the following to the <runtime> section of your app.config file:

<runtime>
  <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.IO.Ports.DoNotCatchSerialStreamThreadExceptions=true" />
</runtime>

For apps that target earlier versions of the .NET Framework but run on the .NET Framework 4.7.1 or later, you can opt in to the exception handling by adding the following to the <runtime> section of your app.config file:

<runtime>
  <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.IO.Ports.DoNotCatchSerialStreamThreadExceptions=false" />
</runtime>
Name Value
Scope Minor
Version 4.7.1
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

ServiceBase doesn't propagate OnStart exceptions

Details

In the .NET Framework 4.7 and earlier versions, exceptions thrown on service startup are not propagated to the caller of ServiceBase.Run.

Starting with applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7.1, the runtime propagates exceptions to ServiceBase.Run for services that fail to start.

Suggestion

On service start, if there is an exception, that exception will be propagated. This should help diagnose cases where services fail to start.

If this behavior is undesirable, you can opt out of it by adding the following AppContextSwitchOverrides element to the runtime section of your application configuration file:

<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.ServiceProcess.DontThrowExceptionsOnStart=true" />

If your application targets an earlier version than 4.7.1 but you want to have this behavior, add the following AppContextSwitchOverrides element to the runtime section of your application configuration file:

<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.ServiceProcess.DontThrowExceptionsOnStart=false" />
Name Value
Scope Minor
Version 4.7.1
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

Security

Default SignedXML and SignedXMS algorithms changed to SHA256

Details

In the .NET Framework 4.7 and earlier, SignedXML and SignedCMS default to SHA1 for some operations.Starting with the .NET Framework 4.7.1, SHA256 is enabled by default for these operations. This change is necessary because SHA1 is no longer considered to be secure.

Suggestion

There are two new context switch values to control whether SHA1 (insecure) or SHA256 is used by default:

  • Switch.System.Security.Cryptography.Xml.UseInsecureHashAlgorithms
  • Switch.System.Security.Cryptography.Pkcs.UseInsecureHashAlgorithms For applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7.1 and later versions, if the use of SHA256 is undesirable, you can restore the default to SHA1 by adding the following configuration switch to the runtime section of your app config file:
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Security.Cryptography.Xml.UseInsecureHashAlgorithms=true;Switch.System.Security.Cryptography.Pkcs.UseInsecureHashAlgorithms=true" />

For applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7 and earlier versions, you can opt into this change by adding the following configuration switch to the runtime section of your app config file:

<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Security.Cryptography.Xml.UseInsecureHashAlgorithms=false;Switch.System.Security.Cryptography.Pkcs.UseInsecureHashAlgorithms=false" />
Name Value
Scope Minor
Version 4.7.1
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

SignedXml.GetPublicKey returns RSACng on net462 (or lightup) without retargeting change

Details

Starting with the .NET Framework 4.6.2, the concrete type of the object returned by the SignedXml.GetPublicKey method changed (without a quirk) from a CryptoServiceProvider implementation to a Cng implementation. This is because the implementation changed from using certificate.PublicKey.Key to using the internal certificate.GetAnyPublicKey which forwards to RSACertificateExtensions.GetRSAPublicKey.

Suggestion

Starting with apps running on the .NET Framework 4.7.1, you can use the CryptoServiceProvider implementation used by default in the .NET Framework 4.6.1 and earlier versions by adding the following configuration switch to the runtime section of your app config file:

<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Security.Cryptography.Xml.SignedXmlUseLegacyCertificatePrivateKey=true" />
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.6.2
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

Windows Communication Foundation (WCF)

Improved accessibility for some .NET SDK tools

Details

In the .NET Framework SDK 4.7.1, the SvcConfigEditor.exe and SvcTraceViewer.exe tools have been improved by fixing varied accessibility issues. Most of these were small issues like a name not being defined or certain UI automation patterns not being implemented correctly. While many users wouldn't be aware of these incorrect values, customers who use assistive technologies like screen readers will find these SDK tools more accessible. Certainly, these fixes change some previous behaviors, like keyboard focus order.In order to get all the accessibility fixes in these tools, you can the following to your app.config file:

<runtime>
  <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures=false"/>
</runtime>
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7.1
Type Retargeting

Windows Forms

Accessibility improvements in Windows Forms controls

Details

Windows Forms is improving how it works with accessibility technologies to better support Windows Forms customers. These include the following changes starting with the .NET Framework 4.7.1:

  • Changes to improve display during High Contrast mode.
  • Changes to improve the property browser experience. Property browser improvements include:
  • Better keyboard navigation through the various drop-down selection windows.
  • Reduced unnecessary tab stops.
  • Better reporting of control types.
  • Improved narrator behavior.
  • Changes to implement missing UI accessibility patterns in controls.

Suggestion

How to opt in or out of these changes In order for the application to benefit from these changes, it must run on the .NET Framework 4.7.1 or later. The application can benefit from these changes in either of the following ways:

  • It is recompiled to target the .NET Framework 4.7.1. These accessibility changes are enabled by default on Windows Forms applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7.1 or later.
  • It opts out of the legacy accessibility behaviors by adding the following AppContext switch to the <runtime> section of the app.config file and setting it to false, as the following example shows.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<configuration>
  <startup>
    <supportedRuntime version="v4.0" sku=".NETFramework,Version=v4.7"/>
  </startup>
  <runtime>
    <!-- AppContextSwitchOverrides value attribute is in the form of 'key1=true/false;key2=true/false  -->
    <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures=false" />
  </runtime>
</configuration>

Applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7.1 or later and want to preserve the legacy accessibility behavior can opt in to the use of legacy accessibility features by explicitly setting this AppContext switch to true.

For an overview of UI automation, see the UI Automation Overview.

Added support for UI Automation patterns and properties

Accessibility clients can take advantage of new WinForms accessibility functionality by using common, publicly described invocation patterns. These patterns are not WinForms-specific. For instance, accessibility clients can call the QueryInterface method on the IAccessible interface (MAAS) to obtain an IServiceProvider interface. If this interface is available, clients can use its QueryService method to request an IAccessibleEx interface. For more information, see Using IAccessibleEx from a Client. Starting with the .NET Framework 4.7.1, IServiceProvider and IAccessibleEx (where applicable) are available for WinForms accessibility objects.

.NET Framework 4.7.1 adds support for the following UI automation patterns and properties:

Use of OS-defined colors in High Contrast themes

  • The Button and CheckBox controls with their FlatStyle property set to FlatStyle.System, which is the default style, now use OS-defined colors in High Contrast theme when selected. Previously, text and background colors were not contrasting and were hard to read.
  • The Button, CheckBox, RadioButton, Label, LinkLabel, and GroupBox controls with their Enabled property set to false used a shaded color to render text in High Contrast themes, resulting in low contrast against the background. Now these controls use the "Disabled Text" color defined by the OS. This fix applies to controls with the FlatStyle property set to a value other than FlatStyle.System. The latter controls are rendered by the OS.
  • DataGridView now renders a visible rectangle around the content of the cell which has the current focus. Previously, this was not visible in certain High Contrast themes.
  • ToolStripMenuItem controls with their Enabled property set to false now use the "Disabled Text" color defined by the OS.
  • ToolStripMenuItem controls with their Checked property set to true now render the associated check mark in a contrasting system color. Previously the check mark color was not contrasting enough and not visible in High Contrast themes. NOTE: Windows 10 has changed values for some high contrast system colors. Windows Forms Framework is based on the Win32 framework. For the best experience, run on the latest version of Windows and opt in to the latest OS changes by adding an app.manifest file in a test application and un-commenting the following code:
<!-- Windows 10 -->
<supportedOS Id="{8e0f7a12-bfb3-4fe8-b9a5-48fd50a15a9a}" />

Improved keyboard navigation

  • When a ComboBox control has its DropDownStyle property set to ComboBoxStyle.DropDownList and is the first control in the tab order on the form, it now displays a focus rectangle when the parent form is opened using the keyboard. Before this change, keyboard focus was on this control, but a focus indicator was not rendered.

Improved Narrator support

  • The MonthCalendar control has added support for assistive technologies to access the control, including the ability for Narrator to read the value of the control when previously it could not.

  • The CheckedListBox control now notifies Narrator when a CheckBox.CheckState property has been changed. Previously, Narrator did not receive notification and as a result users would not be informed that the CheckState property had been updated.

  • The LinkLabel control has changed the way it notifies Narrator of the text of in the control. Previously, Narrator announced this text twice and read "&" symbols as real text even though they are not visible to a user. The duplicated text was removed from the Narrator announcements, as well as unnecessary "&" symbols.

  • The DataGridViewCell control types now correctly report the read-only status to Narrator and other assistive technologies.

  • Narrator is now able to read the System Menu of child windows in [Multiple-Document Interface]~/docs/framework/winforms/advanced/multiple-document-interface-mdi-applications.md) applications.

  • Narrator is now able to read ToolStripMenuItem controls with a ToolStripItem.Enabled property set to false. Previously, Narrator was unable to focus on disabled menu items to read the content.

Name Value
Scope Major
Version 4.8
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF)

Accessibility improvements in WPF

Details

High Contrast improvements

  • The focus for the Expander control is now visible. In previous versions of .NET Framework, it was not.
  • The text in CheckBox and RadioButton controls when they are selected is now easier to see than in previous .NET Framework versions.
  • The border of a disabled ComboBox is now the same color as the disabled text. In previous versions of .NET Framework, it was not.
  • Disabled and focused buttons now use the correct theme color. In previous versions of .NET Framework, they did not.
  • The dropdown button is now visible when a ComboBox control's style is set to ToolBar.ComboBoxStyleKey. In previous versions of .NET Framework, it was not.
  • The sort indicator arrow in a DataGrid control now uses theme colors. In previous versions of .NET Framework, it did not.
  • The default hyperlink style now changes to the correct theme color on mouse over. In previous versions of .NET Framework, it did not.
  • The Keyboard focus on radio buttons is now visible. In previous versions of .NET Framework, it was not.
  • The DataGrid control's checkbox column now uses the expected colors for keyboard focus feedback. In previous versions of .NET Framework, it did not.
  • the Keyboard focus visuals are now visible on ComboBox and ListBox controls. In previous versions of .NET Framework, it was not.

Screen reader interaction improvements

  • Expander controls are now correctly announced as groups (expand/collapse) by screen readers.
  • DataGridCell controls are now correctly announced as data grid cell (localized) by screen readers.
  • Screen readers will now announce the name of an editable ComboBox.
  • PasswordBox controls are no longer announced as "no item in view" by screen readers.

LiveRegion support

Screen readers, such as Narrator, help people understand the user interface (UI) of an application, usually by describing the UI element that currently has focus. However, if a UI element changes somewhere in the screen and it does not have the focus, the user may not be informed and miss important information. LiveRegions are meant to solve this problem. A developer can use them to inform the screen reader or any other UI Automation client that an important change has been made to a UI element. The screen reader can then decide how and when to inform the user of this change. The LiveSetting property also lets the screen reader know how important it is to inform the user of the change made to the UI.

Suggestion

How to opt in or out of these changes

In order for the application to benefit from these changes, it must run on .NET Framework 4.7.1 or later. The application can benefit from these changes in either of the following ways:

  • Target .NET Framework 4.7.1. This is the recommended approach. These accessibility changes are enabled by default on WPF applications that target .NET Framework 4.7.1 or later.

  • It opts out of the legacy accessibility behaviors by adding the following AppContext Switch in the <runtime> section of the app config file and setting it to false, as the following example shows.

    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
    <configuration>
      <startup>
        <supportedRuntime version="v4.0" sku=".NETFramework,Version=v4.7"/>
      </startup>
      <runtime>
        <!-- AppContextSwitchOverrides value attribute is in the form of 'key1=true/false;key2=true/false'  -->
        <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures=false" />
      </runtime>
    </configuration>
    

Applications that target .NET Framework 4.7.1 or later and want to preserve the legacy accessibility behavior can opt in to the use of legacy accessibility features by explicitly setting this AppContext switch to true. For an overview of UI automation, see UI Automation Overview.

Name Value
Scope Major
Version 4.7.1
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

Selector SelectionChanged event and SelectedValue property

Details

Starting with the .NET Framework 4.7.1, a Selector always updates the value of its SelectedValue property before raising the SelectionChanged event, when its selection changes. This makes the SelectedValue property consistent with the other selection properties (SelectedItem and SelectedIndex), which are updated before raising the event.

In the .NET Framework 4.7 and earlier versions, the update to SelectedValue happened before the event in most cases, but it happened after the event if the selection change was caused by changing the SelectedValue property.

Suggestion

Apps that target the .NET Framework 4.7.1 or later can opt out of this change and use legacy behavior by adding the following to the <runtime> section of the application configuration file:

<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides
value="Switch.System.Windows.Controls.TabControl.SelectionPropertiesCanLagBehindSelectionChangedEvent=true" />
</runtime>

Apps that target the .NET Framework 4.7 or earlier but are running on the .NET Framework 4.7.1 or later can enable the new behavior by adding the following line to the <runtime> section of the application .configuration file:

<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Windows.Controls.TabControl.SelectionPropertiesCanLagBehindSelectionChangedEvent=false" />
</runtime>
Name Value
Scope Minor
Version 4.7.1
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

TabControl SelectionChanged event and SelectedContent property

Details

Starting with the .NET Framework 4.7.1, a TabControl updates the value of its SelectedContent property before raising the SelectionChanged event, when its selection changes.In the .NET Framework 4.7 and earlier versions, the update to SelectedContent happened after the event.

Suggestion

Apps that target the .NET Framework 4.7.1 or later can opt out of this change and use legacy behavior by adding the following to the <runtime> section of the application configuration file:

<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Windows.Controls.TabControl.SelectionPropertiesCanLagBehindSelectionChangedEvent=true" />
</runtime>

Apps that target the .NET Framework 4.7 or earlier but are running on the .NET Framework 4.7.1 or later can enable the new behavior by adding the following line to the <runtime> section of the application .configuration file:

<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Windows.Controls.TabControl.SelectionPropertiesCanLagBehindSelectionChangedEvent=false" />
</runtime>
Name Value
Scope Minor
Version 4.7.1
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

The default hash algorithm for WPF PackageDigitalSignatureManager is now SHA256

Details

The System.IO.Packaging.PackageDigitalSignatureManager provides functionality for digital signatures in relation to WPF packages. In the .NET Framework 4.7 and earlier versions, the default algorithm (PackageDigitalSignatureManager.DefaultHashAlgorithm) used for signing parts of a package was SHA1. Due to recent security concerns with SHA1, this default has been changed to SHA256 starting with the .NET Framework 4.7.1. This change affects all package signing, including XPS documents.

Suggestion

A developer who wants to utilize this change while targeting a framework version below .NET Framework 4.7.1 or a developer who requires the previous functionality while targeting .NET Framework 4.7.1 or greater can set the following AppContext flag appropriately. A value of true will result in SHA1 being used as the default algorithm; false results in SHA256.

<configuration>
<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.MS.Internal.UseSha1AsDefaultHashAlgorithmForDigitalSignatures=true"/>
</runtime>
</configuration>
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7.1
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

Windows Workflow Foundation (WF)

Accessibility improvements in Windows Workflow Foundation (WF) workflow designer

Details

The Windows Workflow Foundation (WF) workflow designer is improving how it works with accessibility technologies. These improvements include the following changes:

  • The tab order is changed to left to right and top to bottom in some controls:
  • The initialize correlation window for setting correlation data for the InitializeCorrelation activity
  • The content definition window for the Receive, Send, SendReply, and ReceiveReply activities
  • More functions are available via the keyboard:
  • When editing the properties of an activity, property groups can be collapsed by keyboard the first time they are focused.
  • Warning icons are now accessible by keyboard.
  • The More Properties button in the Properties window is now accessible by keyboard.
  • Keyboard users now can access the header items in the Arguments and Variables panes of the Workflow Designer.
  • Improved visibility of items with focus, such as when:
  • Adding rows to data grids used by the Workflow Designer and activity designers.
  • Tabbing through fields in the ReceiveReply and SendReply activities.
  • Setting default values for variables or arguments
  • Screen readers can now correctly recognize:
  • Breakpoints set in the workflow designer.
  • The FlowSwitch<T>, FlowDecision, and CorrelationScope activities.
  • The contents of the Receive activity.
  • The Target Type for the InvokeMethod activity.
  • The Exception combobox and the Finally section in the TryCatch activity.
  • The Message Type combobox, the splitter in the Add Correlation Initializers window, the Content Definition window, and the CorrelatesOn Defintion window in the messaging activities (Receive, Send, SendReply, and ReceiveReply).
  • State machine transitions and transitions destinations.
  • Annotations and connectors on FlowDecision activities.
  • The context (right-click) menus for activities.
  • The property value editors, the Clear Search button, the By Category and Alphabetical sort buttons, and the Expression Editor dialog in the properties grid.
  • The zoom percentage in the Workflow Designer.
  • The separator in Parallel and Pick activities.
  • The InvokeDelegate activity.
  • The Select Types window for dictionary activities (Microsoft.Activities.AddToDictionary<TKey,TValue>, Microsoft.Activities.RemoveFromDictionary<TKey,TValue>, etc.).
  • The Browse and Select .NET Type window.
  • Breadcrumbs in the Workflow Designer.
  • Users who choose High Contrast themes will see many improvements in the visibility of the Workflow Designer and its controls like better contrast ratios between elements and more noticeable selection boxes used for focus elements.

Suggestion

If you have an application with a re-hosted workflow designer, your application can benefit from these changes by performing either of these actions:

  • Recompile your application to target the .NET Framework 4.7.1. These accessibility changes are enabled by default.
  • If your application targets the .NET Framework 4.7 or earlier but is running on the .NET Framework 4.7.1, you can opt out of these legacy accessibility behaviors by adding the following AppContext switch to the <runtime> section of the app.config file and set it to false, as the following example shows.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<configuration>
  <startup>
    <supportedRuntime version="v4.0" sku=".NETFramework,Version=v4.7"/>
  </startup>
  <runtime>
    <!-- AppContextSwitchOverrides value attribute is in the form of 'key1=true/false;key2=true/false  -->
    <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures=false" />
  </runtime>
</configuration>

Applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7.1 or later and want to preserve the legacy accessibility behavior can opt in to the use of legacy accessibility features by explicitly setting this AppContext switch to true.

Name Value
Scope Minor
Version 4.7.1
Type Retargeting

.NET Framework 4.7.2

Core

Allow Unicode Bidirectional Control Characters in URIs

Details

Unicode specifies several special control characters used to specify the orientation of text. In previous versions of the .NET Framework, these characters were incorrectly stripped from all URIs even if they were present in their percent-encoded form. In order to better follow RFC 3987, we now allow these characters in URIs. When found unencoded in a URI, they are percent-encoded. When found percent-encoded they are left as-is.

Suggestion

For applications that target versions of .NET Framework starting with 4.7.2, support for Unicode bidirectional characters is enabled by default. If this change is undesirable, you can disable it by adding the following AppContextSwitchOverrides switch to the <runtime> section of the application configuration file:

<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Uri.DontKeepUnicodeBidiFormattingCharacters=true" />
</runtime>

For applications that target earlier versions of the .NET Framework but are running under versions starting with .NET Framework 4.7.2, support for Unicode bidirectional characters is disabled by default. You can enable it by adding the following AppContextSwitchOverrides switch to the <runtime> section of the application configuration file::

<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Uri.DontKeepUnicodeBidiFormattingCharacters=false" />
</runtime>
Name Value
Scope Minor
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

DeflateStream uses native APIs for decompression

Details

Starting with the .NET Framework 4.7.2, the implementation of decompression in the T:System.IO.Compression.DeflateStream class has changed to use native Windows APIs by default. Typically, this results in a substantial performance improvement. All .NET applications targeting the .NET Framework version 4.7.2 or higher use the native implementation.This change might result in some differences in behavior, which include:

  • Exception messages may be different. However, the type of exception thrown remains the same.
  • Some special situations, such as not having enough memory to complete an operation, may be handled differently.
  • There are known differences for parsing gzip header (note: only GZipStream set for decompression is affected):
  • Exceptions when parsing invalid headers may be thrown at different times.
  • The native implementation enforces that values for some reserved flags inside the gzip header (i.e. FLG) are set according to the specification, which may cause it to throw an exception where previously invalid values were ignored.

Suggestion

If decompression with native APIs has adversely affected the behavior of your app, you can opt out of this feature by adding the Switch.System.IO.Compression.DoNotUseNativeZipLibraryForDecompression switch to the runtime section of your app.config file and setting it to true:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<configuration>
  <runtime>
    <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.IO.Compression.DoNotUseNativeZipLibraryForDecompression=true" />
  </runtime>
</configuration>
Name Value
Scope Minor
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

Ensure System.Uri uses a consistent reserved character set

Details

In System.Uri, certain percent-encoded characters that were sometimes decoded are now consistently left encoded. This occurs across the properties and methods that access the path, query, fragment, or userinfo components of the URI. The behavior will change only when both of the following are true:

  • The URI contains the encoded form of any of the following reserved characters: :, ', (, ), ! or *.
  • The URI contains a Unicode or encoded non-reserved character. If both of the above are true, the encoded reserved characters are left encoded. In previous versions of the .NET Framework, they are decoded.

Suggestion

For applications that target versions of .NET Framework starting with 4.7.2, the new decoding behavior is enabled by default. If this change is undesirable, you can disable it by adding the following AppContextSwitchOverrides switch to the <runtime> section of the application configuration file:

<runtime>
  <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Uri.DontEnableStrictRFC3986ReservedCharacterSets=true" />
</runtime>

For applications that target earlier versions of the .NET Framework but are running under versions starting with .NET Framework 4.7.2, the new decoding behavior is disabled by default. You can enable it by adding the following AppContextSwitchOverrides switch to the <runtime> section of the application configuration file:

<runtime>
  <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Uri.DontEnableStrictRFC3986ReservedCharacterSets=false" />
</runtime>
Name Value
Scope Minor
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

Resgen refuses to load content from the web

Details

.resx files may contain binary formatted input. If you attempt to use resgen to load a file that was downloaded from an untrusted location, it will fail to load the input by default.

Suggestion

Resgen users who require loading binary formatted input from untrusted locations can either remove the mark of the web from the input file or apply the opt-out quirk.Add the following registry setting to apply the machine wide opt-out quirk: [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft.NETFramework\SDK] "AllowProcessOfUntrustedResourceFiles"="true"

Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting

Stack traces obtained when using portable PDBs now include source file and line information if requested

Details

Starting with .NET Framework 4.7.2, stack traces obtained when using portable PDBs include source file and line information when requested. In versions prior to .NET Framework 4.7.2, source file and line information would be unavailable when using portable PDBs even if explicitly requested.

Suggestion

For applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7.2, you can opt out of the source file and line information when using portable PDBs if it is not desirable by adding the following to the <runtime> section of your app.config file:

<runtime>
  <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Diagnostics.IgnorePortablePDBsInStackTraces=true" />
</runtime>

For applications that target earlier versions of the .NET Framework but run on the .NET Framework 4.7.2 or later, you can opt in to the source file and line information when using portable PDBs by adding the following to the <runtime> section of your app.config file:

<runtime>
  <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Diagnostics.IgnorePortablePDBsInStackTraces=false" />
</runtime>
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

Windows Forms

Accessibility improvements in Windows Forms controls for .NET 4.7.2

Details

Windows Forms Framework is improving how it works with accessibility technologies to better support Windows Forms customers. These include the following changes:

  • Changes to improve display during High Contrast mode.
  • Changes to improve the keyboard navigation in the DataGridView and MenuStrip controls.
  • Changes to interaction with Narrator.

Suggestion

How to opt in or out of these changes In order for the application to benefit from these changes, it must run on the .NET Framework 4.7.2 or later. The application can benefit from these changes in either of the following ways:

  • It is recompiled to target the .NET Framework 4.7.2. These accessibility changes are enabled by default on Windows Forms applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7.2 or later.
  • It targets the .NET Framework 4.7.1 or earlier version and opts out of the legacy accessibility behaviors by adding the following AppContext Switch to the <runtime> section of the app config file and setting it to false, as the following example shows.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<configuration>
  <startup>
    <supportedRuntime version="v4.0" sku=".NETFramework,Version=v4.7"/>
  </startup>
  <runtime>
    <!-- AppContextSwitchOverrides value attribute is in the form of 'key1=true/false;key2=true/false  -->
    <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures=false;Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures.2=false" />
  </runtime>
</configuration>

Note that to opt in to the accessibility features added in .NET Framework 4.7.2, you must also opt in to accessibility features of .NET Framework 4.7.1 as well. Applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7.2 or later and want to preserve the legacy accessibility behavior can opt in to the use of legacy accessibility features by explicitly setting this AppContext switch to true.

Use of OS-defined colors in High Contrast themes

  • The drop down arrow of the ToolStripDropDownButton now uses OS-defined colors in High Contrast theme.
  • Button, RadioButton and CheckBox controls with FlatStyle set to FlatStyle.Flat or FlatStyle.Popup now use OS-defined colors in High Contrast theme when selected. Previously, text and background colors were not contrasting and were hard to read.
  • Controls contained within a GroupBox that has its Enabled property set to false will now use OS-defined colors in High Contrast theme.
  • The ToolStripButton, ToolStripComboBox, and ToolStripDropDownButton controls have an increased luminosity contrast ratio in High Contrast Mode.
  • DataGridViewLinkCell will by default use OS-defined colors in High Contrast mode for the DataGridViewLinkCell.LinkColor property. NOTE: Windows 10 has changed values for some high contrast system colors. Windows Forms Framework is based on the Win32 framework. For the best experience, run on the latest version of Windows and opt in to the latest OS changes by adding an app.manifest file in a test application and un-commenting the following code:
<!-- Windows 10 -->
<supportedOS Id="{8e0f7a12-bfb3-4fe8-b9a5-48fd50a15a9a}" />

Improved Narrator support

  • Narrator now announces the value of the ToolStripMenuItem.ShortcutKeys property when announcing the text of a ToolStripMenuItem.
  • Narrator now indicates when a ToolStripMenuItem has its Enabled property set to false.
  • Narrator now gives feedback on the state of a check box when the ListView.CheckBoxes property is set to true.
  • Narrator Scan Mode focus order is now consistent with the visual order of the controls on the ClickOnce download dialog window.

Improved DataGridView Accessibility support

Improved Visual cues

  • The RadioButton and CheckBox controls with an empty Text property will now display a focus indicator when they receive focus.

Improved Property Grid Support

Name Value
Scope Major
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting

ContextMenuStrip.SourceControl property contains a valid control in the case of nested ToolStripMenuItems

Details

In the .NET Framework 4.7.1 and previous versions, the ContextMenuStrip.SourceControl property incorrectly returns null when the user opens the menu from nested ToolStripMenuItem controls. In the .NET Framework 4.7.2 and later, SourceControl property is always set to the actual source control.

Suggestion

How to opt in or out of these changes In order for an application to benefit from these changes, it must run on the .NET Framework 4.7.2 or later. The application can benefit from these changes in either of the following ways:

  • It targets the .NET Framework 4.7.2. This change is enabled by default on Windows Forms applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7.2 or later.
  • It targets the .NET Framework 4.7.1 or an earlier version and opts out of the legacy accessibility behaviors by adding the following AppContext Switch to the <runtime> section of the app.config file and setting it to false, as the following example shows.
<runtime>
  <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Windows.Forms.UseLegacyContextMenuStripSourceControlValue=false"/>
</runtime>

Applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7.2 or later, and want to preserve the legacy behavior can opt in to the use of the legacy source control value by explicitly setting this AppContext switch to true.

Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

PrivateFontCollection.AddFontFile method releases Font resources

Details

In the .NET Framework 4.7.1 and previous versions, the System.Drawing.Text.PrivateFontCollection class does not release the GDI+ font resources after the PrivateFontCollection is disposed for Font objects that are added to this collection using the AddFontFile(String) method. In the .NET Framework 4.7.2 and later Dispose releases the GDI+ fonts that were added to the collection as files.

Suggestion

How to opt in or out of these changes In order for an application to benefit from these changes, it must run on the .NET Framework 4.7.2 or later. The application can benefit from these changes in either of the following ways:

  • It is recompiled to target the .NET Framework 4.7.2. This change is enabled by default on Windows Forms applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7.2 or later.
  • It targets the .NET Framework 4.7.1 or an earlier version and opts out of the legacy accessibility behaviors by adding the following AppContext Switch to the <runtime> section of the app.config file and setting it to false, as the following example shows.
<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Drawing.Text.DoNotRemoveGdiFontsResourcesFromFontCollection=false"/>
</runtime>

Applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7.2 or later, and want to preserve the legacy behavior can opt in to not release font resources by explicitly setting this AppContext switch to true.

Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

WinForm's Domain upbutton and downbutton actions are in sync now

Details

In the .NET Framework 4.7.1 and previous versions the DomainUpDown control's DomainUpDown.UpButton() action is ignored when control text is present, and the developer is required to use DomainUpDown.DownButton() action on the control before using DomainUpDown.UpButton() action. Starting with the .NET Framework 4.7.2 both the DomainUpDown.UpButton() and DomainUpDown.DownButton() actions work independently in this scenario and remain in sync.

Suggestion

In order for an application to benefit from these changes, it must run on the .NET Framework 4.7.2 or later. The application can benefit from these changes in either of the following ways:

  • It is recompiled to target the .NET Framework 4.7.2. This change is enabled by default on Windows Forms applications that target the .NET Framework 4.7.2 or later.
  • It opts out of the legacy scrolling behavior by adding the following AppContext Switch to the <runtime> section of the app config file and setting it to false, as the following example shows.
<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Windows.Forms.DomainUpDown.UseLegacyScrolling=false"/>
</runtime>
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting

Affected APIs

Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF)

Keyboard focus now moves correctly across multiple layers of WinForms/WPF hosting

Details

Consider a WPF application hosting a WinForms control which in turn hosts WPF controls. Users may not be able to tab out of the WinForms layer if the first or last control in that layer is the WPF System.Windows.Forms.Integration.ElementHost. This change fixes this issue, and users are now able to tab out of the WinForms layer.Automated applications that rely on focus never escaping the WinForms layer may no longer work as expected.

Suggestion

A developer who wants to utilize this change while targeting a framework version below .NET 4.7.2 can set the following set of AppContext flags to false for the change to be enabled.

<configuration>
<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures=false;Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures.2=false"/>
</runtime>
</configuration>

WPF applications must opt in to all early accessibility improvements to get the later improvements. In other words, both the Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures and the Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures.2 switches must be setA developer who requires the previous functionality while targeting .NET 4.7.2 or greater can set the following AppContext flag to true for the change to be disabled.

<configuration>
<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures.2=true"/>
</runtime>
</configuration>
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting

The default hash algorithm for WPF's Markup Compiler is now SHA256

Details

The WPF MarkupCompiler provides compilation services for XAML markup files. In the .NET Framework 4.7.1 and earlier versions, the default hash algorithm used for checksums was SHA1. Due to recent security concerns with SHA1, this default has been changed to SHA256 starting with the .NET Framework 4.7.2. This change affects all checksum generation for markup files during compilation.

Suggestion

A developer who targets .NET Framework 4.7.2 or greater and wants to revert to SHA1 hashing behavior must set the following AppContext flag.

<configuration>
<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Windows.Markup.DoNotUseSha256ForMarkupCompilerChecksumAlgorithm=true"/>
</runtime>
</configuration>

A developer who wants to utilize SHA256 hashing while targeting a framework version below .NET 4.7.2 must set the below AppContext flag. Note that the installed version of the .NET Framework must be 4.7.2 or greater.

<configuration>
<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Windows.Markup.DoNotUseSha256ForMarkupCompilerChecksumAlgorithm=false"/>
</runtime>
</configuration>
Name Value
Scope Transparent
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting

WPF AppDomain Shutdown Handling May Now Call Dispatcher.Invoke in Cleanup of Weak Events

Details

In .NET Framework 4.7.1 and earlier versions, WPF potentially creates a System.Windows.Threading.Dispatcher on the .NET finalizer thread during AppDomain shutdown. This was fixed in .NET Framework 4.7.2 and later versions by making the cleanup of weak events thread-aware. Due to this, WPF may call Dispatcher.Invoke to complete the cleanup process.In certain applications, this change in finalizer timing can potentially cause exceptions during AppDomain or process shutdown. This is generally seen in applications that do not correctly shut down dispatchers running on worker threads prior to process or AppDomain shutdown. Such applications should take care to properly manage the lifetime of dispatchers.

Suggestion

In .NET Framework 4.7.2 and later versions, developers can disable this fix in order to help alleviate (but not eliminate) timing issues that may occur due to the cleanup change.To disable the change in cleanup, use the following AppContext flag.

<configuration>
<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.MS.Internal.DoNotInvokeInWeakEventTableShutdownListener=true"/>
</runtime>
</configuration>
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting

WPF Changing a primary key when displaying ADO data in a Master/Detail scenario

Details

Suppose you have an ADO collection of items of type Order, with a relation named "OrderDetails" relating it to a collection of items of type Detail via the primary key "OrderID". In your WPF app, you can bind a list control to the details for a given order:

<ListBox ItemsSource="{Binding Path=OrderDetails}" >

where the DataContext is an Order. WPF gets the value of the OrderDetails property - a collection D of all the Detail items whose OrderID matches the OrderID of the master item. The behavior change arises when you change the primary key OrderID of the master item. ADO automatically changes the OrderID of each of the affected records in the Details collection (namely the ones copied into collection D). But what happens to D?

  • Old behavior: Collection D is cleared. The master item does not raise a change notification for property OrderDetails. The ListBox continues to use collection D, which is now empty.
  • New behavior: Collection D is unchanged. Each of its items raises a change notification for the OrderID property. The ListBox continues to use collection D, and displays the details with the new OrderID. WPF implements the new behavior by creating collection D in a different way: by calling the ADO method DataRowView.CreateChildView(DataRelation, Boolean) with the followParent argument set to true.

Suggestion

An app gets the new behavior by using the following AppContext switch.

<configuration>
  <runtime>
    <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Windows.Data.DoNotUseFollowParentWhenBindingToADODataRelation=false"/>
  </runtime>
</configuration>

The switch defaults to true (old behavior) for apps that target .NET 4.7.1 or below, and to false (new behavior) for apps that target .NET 4.7.2 or above.

Name Value
Scope Minor
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting

WPF FocusVisual for RadioButton and CheckBox Now Displays Correctly When The Controls Have No Content

Details

In the .NET Framework 4.7.1 and earlier versions, WPF System.Windows.Controls.CheckBox and System.Windows.Controls.RadioButton have inconsistent and, in Classic and High Contrast themes, incorrect focus visuals. These issues occur in cases where the controls do not have any content set. This can make the transition between themes confusing and the focus visual hard to see. In the .NET Framework 4.7.2, these visuals are now more consistent across themes and more easily visible in Classic and High Contrast themes.

Suggestion

A developer targeting .NET Framework 4.7.2 that wants to revert to the behavior in .NET 4.7.1 will need to set the following AppContext flag.

<configuration>
<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures.2=true;"/>
</runtime>
</configuration>

A developer who wants to utilize this change while targeting a framework version below .NET 4.7.2 must set the following AppContext flags.Note that all the flags must be set appropriately and the installed version of the .NET Framework must be 4.7.2 or greater.WPF applications are required to opt in to all earlier accessibility improvements to get the latest improvements. To do this, ensure that both the AppContext switches 'Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures' and 'Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures.2' are set to false.

<configuration>
<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures=false;Switch.UseLegacyAccessibilityFeatures.2=false;"/>
</runtime>
</configuration>
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting

WPF TextBox/PasswordBox Text Selection Does Not Follow System Colors

Details

In .NET Framework 4.7.1 and earlier versions, WPF System.Windows.Controls.TextBox and System.Windows.Controls.PasswordBox could only render a text selection in the Adorner layer. In some system themes this would occlude text, making it hard to read. In .NET Framework 4.7.2 and later, developers have an option of enabling a non-Adorner-based selection rendering scheme that alleviates this issue.

Suggestion

A developer who wants to utilize this change must set the following AppContext flag appropriately. To utilize this feature, the installed .NET Framework version must be 4.7.2 or greater.To enabled the non-adorner-based selection, use the following AppContext flag.

<configuration>
<runtime>
<AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.System.Windows.Controls.Text.UseAdornerForTextboxSelectionRendering=false"/>
</runtime>
</configuration>
Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting

Windows Workflow Foundation (WF)

Avoiding endless recursion for IWorkflowInstanceManagement.TransactedCancel and IWorkflowInstanceManagement.TransactedTerminate

Details

Under some circumstances when using IWorkflowInstanceManagement.TransactedCancel or IWorkflowInstanceManagement.TransactedTerminate APIs to cancel or terminate a workflow service instance, the workflow instance may encounter a stack overflow due to endless recursion when the Workflow runtime attempts to persist the service instance as part of processing the request. The problem occurs if the workflow instance is in a state where it is waiting for some other outstanding WCF request to another service to complete. The TransactedCancel and TransactedTerminate operations create work items that are queued for the workflow service instance. These work items are not executed as part of the processing of the TransactedCancel/TransactedTerminate request. Because the workflow service instance is busy waiting for the other outstanding WCF request to complete, the work item created remains queued. The TransactedCancel/TransactedTerminate operation completes and control is returned back to the client. When the transaction associated with the TransactedCancel/TransactedTerminate operation attempts to commit, it needs to persist the workflow service instance state. But because there is an outstanding WCF request for the instance, the Workflow runtime cannot persist the workflow service instance, and an endless recursion loop leads to the stack overflow.Because TransactedCancel and TransactedTerminate only create a work item in memory, the fact that a transaction exists doesn't have any effect. A rollback of the transaction does not discard the work item.To address this issue, starting in .NET Framework 4.7.2, we have introduced an AppSetting that can be added to the web.config/app.config of the workflow service that tells it to ignore transactions for TransactedCancel and TransactedTerminate. This allows the transaction to commit without waiting for the workflow instance to persist. The AppSetting for this feature is named microsoft:WorkflowServices:IgnoreTransactionsForTransactedCancelAndTransactedTerminate. A value of true indicates that the transaction should be ignored, thus avoiding the stack overflow. The default value of this AppSetting is false, so existing workflow service instances are not affected.

Suggestion

If you are using AppFabric or another IWorkflowInstanceManagement client and are encountering a stack overflow in the workflow service instance when trying to cancel or terminate a workflow instance, you can add the following to the <appSettings> section of the web.config/app.config file for the workflow service:

<add key="microsoft:WorkflowServices:IgnoreTransactionsForTransactedCancelAndTransactedTerminate" value="true"/>

If you are not encountering the problem, you do not need to do this.

Name Value
Scope Edge
Version 4.7.2
Type Retargeting