ModuleBuilder.DefineManifestResource Method
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Defines a binary large object (BLOB) that represents a manifest resource to be embedded in the dynamic assembly.
public:
void DefineManifestResource(System::String ^ name, System::IO::Stream ^ stream, System::Reflection::ResourceAttributes attribute);
public void DefineManifestResource (string name, System.IO.Stream stream, System.Reflection.ResourceAttributes attribute);
member this.DefineManifestResource : string * System.IO.Stream * System.Reflection.ResourceAttributes -> unit
Public Sub DefineManifestResource (name As String, stream As Stream, attribute As ResourceAttributes)
Parameters
- name
- String
The case-sensitive name for the resource.
- stream
- Stream
A stream that contains the bytes for the resource.
- attribute
- ResourceAttributes
An enumeration value that specifies whether the resource is public or private.
Exceptions
name
is a zero-length string.
The dynamic assembly that contains the current module is transient; that is, no file name was specified when DefineDynamicModule(String, String) was called.
Examples
The following example generates and saves a dynamic assembly named EmittedManifestResourceAssembly.exe
, which contains an embedded unmanaged resource. The example creates the assembly, which consists of one module, and opens a memory stream to contain the unmanaged resource. The code then calls the DefineManifestResource method to define the resource.
Note
You can use any kind of stream for your resource; for example, you can read the unmanaged binary data from a file.
The example defines a type in the dynamic module with a Main
method, and generates MSIL for the method body. After the body for the Main
method has been generated and the type has been created, the code example writes five bytes to the stream associated with the manifest resource. When the assembly is saved, the resource is appended to it.
After running the example, you can run the emitted assembly. The code in the emitted assembly's Main
method reads the embedded manifest resource and prints the byte values to the console. You can use the Ildasm.exe (IL Disassembler) to view the information in the assembly manifest.
using System;
using System.Reflection;
using System.Reflection.Emit;
using System.IO;
public class Example
{
public static void Main()
{
// Define a dynamic assembly with one module. The module
// name and the assembly name are the same.
AssemblyName asmName =
new AssemblyName("EmittedManifestResourceAssembly");
AssemblyBuilder asmBuilder =
AppDomain.CurrentDomain.DefineDynamicAssembly(
asmName,
AssemblyBuilderAccess.RunAndSave
);
ModuleBuilder modBuilder = asmBuilder.DefineDynamicModule(
asmName.Name,
asmName.Name + ".exe"
);
// Create a memory stream for the unmanaged resource data.
// You can use any stream; for example, you might read the
// unmanaged resource data from a binary file. It is not
// necessary to put any data into the stream right now.
MemoryStream ms = new MemoryStream(1024);
// Define a public manifest resource with the name
// "MyBinaryData, and associate it with the memory stream.
modBuilder.DefineManifestResource(
"MyBinaryData",
ms,
ResourceAttributes.Public
);
// Create a type with a public static Main method that will
// be the entry point for the emitted assembly.
//
// The purpose of the Main method in this example is to read
// the manifest resource and display it, byte by byte.
//
TypeBuilder tb = modBuilder.DefineType("Example");
MethodBuilder main = tb.DefineMethod("Main",
MethodAttributes.Public | MethodAttributes.Static
);
// The Main method uses the Assembly type and the Stream
// type.
Type asm = typeof(Assembly);
Type str = typeof(Stream);
// Get MethodInfo objects for the methods called by
// Main.
MethodInfo getEx = asm.GetMethod("GetExecutingAssembly");
// Use the overload of GetManifestResourceStream that
// takes one argument, a string.
MethodInfo getMRS = asm.GetMethod(
"GetManifestResourceStream",
new Type[] {typeof(string)}
);
MethodInfo rByte = str.GetMethod("ReadByte");
// Use the overload of WriteLine that writes an Int32.
MethodInfo write = typeof(Console).GetMethod(
"WriteLine",
new Type[] {typeof(int)}
);
ILGenerator ilg = main.GetILGenerator();
// Main uses two local variables: the instance of the
// stream returned by GetManifestResourceStream, and
// the value returned by ReadByte. The load and store
// instructions refer to these locals by position
// (0 and 1).
LocalBuilder s = ilg.DeclareLocal(str);
LocalBuilder b = ilg.DeclareLocal(typeof(int));
// Call the static Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly() method,
// which leaves the assembly instance on the stack. Push the
// string name of the resource on the stack, and call the
// GetManifestResourceStream(string) method of the assembly
// instance.
ilg.EmitCall(OpCodes.Call, getEx, null);
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Ldstr, "MyBinaryData");
ilg.EmitCall(OpCodes.Callvirt, getMRS, null);
// Store the Stream instance.
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Stloc_0);
// Create a label, and associate it with this point
// in the emitted code.
Label loop = ilg.DefineLabel();
ilg.MarkLabel(loop);
// Load the Stream instance onto the stack, and call
// its ReadByte method. The return value is on the
// stack now; store it in location 1 (variable b).
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Ldloc_0);
ilg.EmitCall(OpCodes.Callvirt, rByte, null);
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Stloc_1);
// Load the value on the stack again, and call the
// WriteLine method to print it.
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Ldloc_1);
ilg.EmitCall(OpCodes.Call, write, null);
// Load the value one more time; load -1 (minus one)
// and compare the two values. If return value from
// ReadByte was not -1, branch to the label 'loop'.
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Ldloc_1);
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Ldc_I4_M1);
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Ceq);
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Brfalse_S, loop);
// When all the bytes in the stream have been read,
// return. This is the end of Main.
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Ret);
// Create the type "Example" in the dynamic assembly.
tb.CreateType();
// Because the manifest resource was added as an open
// stream, the data can be written at any time, right up
// until the assembly is saved. In this case, the data
// consists of five bytes.
ms.Write(new byte[] { 105, 36, 74, 97, 109 }, 0, 5);
ms.SetLength(5);
// Set the Main method as the entry point for the
// assembly, and save the assembly. The manifest resource
// is read from the memory stream, and appended to the
// end of the assembly. You can open the assembly with
// Ildasm and view the resource header for "MyBinaryData".
asmBuilder.SetEntryPoint(main);
asmBuilder.Save(asmName.Name + ".exe");
Console.WriteLine("Now run EmittedManifestResourceAssembly.exe");
}
}
/* This code example doesn't produce any output. The assembly it
emits, EmittedManifestResourceAssembly.exe, produces the following
output:
105
36
74
97
109
-1
*/
Imports System.Reflection
Imports System.Reflection.Emit
Imports System.IO
Public Class Example
Public Shared Sub Main()
' Define a dynamic assembly with one module. The module
' name and the assembly name are the same.
Dim asmName As New AssemblyName("EmittedManifestResourceAssembly")
Dim asmBuilder As AssemblyBuilder = _
AppDomain.CurrentDomain.DefineDynamicAssembly( _
asmName, _
AssemblyBuilderAccess.RunAndSave _
)
Dim modBuilder As ModuleBuilder = _
asmBuilder.DefineDynamicModule( _
asmName.Name, _
asmName.Name + ".exe" _
)
' Create a memory stream for the unmanaged resource data.
' You can use any stream; for example, you might read the
' unmanaged resource data from a binary file. It is not
' necessary to put any data into the stream right now.
Dim ms As New MemoryStream(1024)
' Define a public manifest resource with the name
' "MyBinaryData, and associate it with the memory stream.
modBuilder.DefineManifestResource( _
"MyBinaryData", _
ms, _
ResourceAttributes.Public _
)
' Create a type with a public static Main method that will
' be the entry point for the emitted assembly.
'
' The purpose of the Main method in this example is to read
' the manifest resource and display it, byte by byte.
'
Dim tb As TypeBuilder = modBuilder.DefineType("Example")
Dim main As MethodBuilder = tb.DefineMethod( _
"Main", _
MethodAttributes.Public Or MethodAttributes.Static _
)
' The Main method uses the Assembly type and the Stream
' type.
Dim asm As Type = GetType([Assembly])
Dim str As Type = GetType(Stream)
' Get MethodInfo objects for the methods called by
' Main.
Dim getEx As MethodInfo = asm.GetMethod("GetExecutingAssembly")
' Use the overload of GetManifestResourceStream that
' takes one argument, a string.
Dim getMRS As MethodInfo = asm.GetMethod( _
"GetManifestResourceStream", _
New Type() {GetType(String)} _
)
Dim rByte As MethodInfo = str.GetMethod("ReadByte")
' Use the overload of WriteLine that writes an Int32.
Dim write As MethodInfo = GetType(Console).GetMethod( _
"WriteLine", _
New Type() {GetType(Integer)} _
)
Dim ilg As ILGenerator = main.GetILGenerator()
' Main uses two local variables: the instance of the
' stream returned by GetManifestResourceStream, and
' the value returned by ReadByte. The load and store
' instructions refer to these locals by position
' (0 and 1).
Dim s As LocalBuilder = ilg.DeclareLocal(str)
Dim b As LocalBuilder = ilg.DeclareLocal(GetType(Integer))
' Call the static Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly() method,
' which leaves the assembly instance on the stack. Push the
' string name of the resource on the stack, and call the
' GetManifestResourceStream(string) method of the assembly
' instance.
ilg.EmitCall(OpCodes.Call, getEx, Nothing)
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Ldstr, "MyBinaryData")
ilg.EmitCall(OpCodes.Callvirt, getMRS, Nothing)
' Store the Stream instance.
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Stloc_0)
' Create a label, and associate it with this point
' in the emitted code.
Dim theLoop As Label = ilg.DefineLabel()
ilg.MarkLabel(theLoop)
' Load the Stream instance onto the stack, and call
' its ReadByte method. The return value is on the
' stack now; store it in location 1 (variable b).
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Ldloc_0)
ilg.EmitCall(OpCodes.Callvirt, rByte, Nothing)
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Stloc_1)
' Load the value on the stack again, and call the
' WriteLine method to print it.
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Ldloc_1)
ilg.EmitCall(OpCodes.Call, write, Nothing)
' Load the value one more time; load -1 (minus one)
' and compare the two values. If return value from
' ReadByte was not -1, branch to the label 'loop'.
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Ldloc_1)
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Ldc_I4_M1)
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Ceq)
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Brfalse_S, theLoop)
' When all the bytes in the stream have been read,
' return. This is the end of Main.
ilg.Emit(OpCodes.Ret)
' Create the type "Example" in the dynamic assembly.
tb.CreateType()
' Because the manifest resource was added as an open
' stream, the data can be written at any time, right up
' until the assembly is saved. In this case, the data
' consists of five bytes.
ms.Write(New Byte() {105, 36, 74, 97, 109}, 0, 5)
ms.SetLength(5)
' Set the Main method as the entry point for the
' assembly, and save the assembly. The manifest resource
' is read from the memory stream, and appended to the
' end of the assembly. You can open the assembly with
' Ildasm and view the resource header for "MyBinaryData".
asmBuilder.SetEntryPoint(main)
asmBuilder.Save(asmName.Name + ".exe")
Console.WriteLine("Now run EmittedManifestResourceAssembly.exe")
End Sub
End Class
' This code example doesn't produce any output. The assembly it
' emits, EmittedManifestResourceAssembly.exe, produces the following
' output:
'
'105
'36
'74
'97
'109
'-1
'
Remarks
Resources that are recorded in the assembly manifest can be managed resources or manifest resource BLOBs, and each of these can be included in the assembly either by linking or by embedding. All four scenarios are supported for dynamic assemblies.
This method allows you to embed a manifest resource BLOB into a dynamic assembly.
To embed a managed resource into the manifest module of a dynamic assembly or into a satellite module, use the ModuleBuilder.DefineResource method to get a resource writer, and use the ResourceWriter.AddResource method to add the resource.
To link a managed resource into a dynamic assembly, use the AssemblyBuilder.DefineResource method to get a resource writer, and use the ResourceWriter.AddResource method to add the linked resource.
To link a manifest resource BLOB into a dynamic assembly, use the AssemblyBuilder.AddResourceFile method to add the linked resource.
In addition, a single Win32 resource can be attached to an assembly by using the AssemblyBuilder.DefineUnmanagedResource method or the ModuleBuilder.DefineUnmanagedResource method. This resource does not appear in the assembly manifest.