MSBuild items
MSBuild items are inputs into the build system, and they typically represent files (the files are specified in the Include
attribute). Items are grouped into item types based on their element names. Item types are named lists of items that can be used as parameters for tasks. The tasks use the item values to perform the steps of the build process.
Because items are named by the item type to which they belong, the terms "item" and "item value" can be used interchangeably.
Create items in a project file
You declare items in the project file as child elements of an ItemGroup element. Valid item names begin with an uppercase or lowercase letter or underscore (_
); valid subsequent characters include alphanumeric characters (letters or digits), underscore, and hyphen (-
). The name of the child element is the type of the item. The Include
attribute of the element specifies the items (files) to be included with that item type. For example, the following XML creates an item type that's named Compile
, which includes two files.
<ItemGroup>
<Compile Include = "file1.cs"/>
<Compile Include = "file2.cs"/>
</ItemGroup>
The item file2.cs doesn't replace the item file1.cs; instead, the file name is appended to the list of values for the Compile
item type.
The following XML creates the same item type by declaring both files in one Include
attribute. Notice that the file names are separated by a semicolon.
<ItemGroup>
<Compile Include = "file1.cs;file2.cs"/>
</ItemGroup>
The Include
attribute is a path that is interpreted relative to the project file's folder, $(MSBuildProjectPath), even if the item is in an imported file such as a .targets file.
Create items during execution
Items that are outside Target elements are assigned values during the evaluation phase of a build. During the subsequent execution phase, items can be created or modified in the following ways:
Any task can emit an item. To emit an item, the Task element must have a child Output element that has an
ItemName
attribute.The CreateItem task can emit an item. This usage is deprecated.
Starting in the .NET Framework 3.5,
Target
elements may contain ItemGroup elements that may contain item elements.
Reference items in a project file
To reference item types throughout the project file, you use the syntax @(<ItemType>). For example, you would reference the item type in the previous example by using @(Compile)
. By using this syntax, you can pass items to tasks by specifying the item type as a parameter of that task. For more information, see How to: Select the files to build.
By default, the items of an item type are separated by semicolons (;) when it's expanded. You can use the syntax @(<ItemType>, '<separator>') to specify a separator other than the default. For more information, see How to: Display an item list separated with commas.
Use wildcards to specify items
You can use the **
, *
, and ?
wildcard characters to specify a group of files as inputs for a build instead of listing each file separately.
- The
?
wildcard character matches a single character. - The
*
wildcard character matches zero or more characters. - The
**
wildcard character sequence matches a partial path.
For example, you can specify all the .cs
files in the directory that contains the project file by using the following element in your project file.
<CSFile Include="*.cs"/>
The following element selects all .vb
files on the D:
drive:
<VBFile Include="D:/**/*.vb"/>
If you would like to include literal *
or ?
characters in an item without wildcard expansion, you must escape the wildcard characters.
For more information about wildcard characters, see How to: Select the files to build.
Use the Exclude attribute
Item elements can contain the Exclude
attribute, which excludes specific items (files) from the item type. The Exclude
attribute is typically used together with wildcard characters. For example, the following XML adds every .cs file in the directory to the CSFile item type, except the DoNotBuild.cs file.
<ItemGroup>
<CSFile Include="*.cs" Exclude="DoNotBuild.cs"/>
</ItemGroup>
The Exclude
attribute affects only the items that are added by the Include
attribute in the item element that contains them both. The following example wouldn't exclude the file Form1.cs, which was added in the preceding item element.
<Compile Include="*.cs" />
<Compile Include="*.res" Exclude="Form1.cs">
For more information, see How to: Exclude files from the build.
Item metadata
Items may contain metadata in addition to the information in the Include
and Exclude
attributes. This metadata can be used by tasks that require more information about the items or to batch tasks and targets. For more information, see Batching.
Metadata is a collection of key-value pairs that are declared in the project file as child elements of an item element. The name of the child element is the name of the metadata, and the value of the child element is the value of the metadata.
The metadata is associated with the item element that contains it. For example, the following XML adds Culture
metadata that has the value Fr
to both the one.cs and the two.cs items of the CSFile item type.
<ItemGroup>
<CSFile Include="one.cs;two.cs">
<Culture>Fr</Culture>
</CSFile>
</ItemGroup>
An item can have zero or more metadata values. You can change metadata values at any time. If you set metadata to an empty value, you effectively remove it from the build.
Reference item metadata in a project file
You can reference item metadata throughout the project file by using the syntax %(<ItemMetadataName>). If ambiguity exists, you can qualify a reference by using the name of the item type. For example, you can specify %(<ItemType.ItemMetaDataName>).The following example uses the Display metadata to batch the Message task. For more information about how to use item metadata for batching, see Item metadata in task batching.
<Project xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/developer/msbuild/2003">
<ItemGroup>
<Stuff Include="One.cs" >
<Display>false</Display>
</Stuff>
<Stuff Include="Two.cs">
<Display>true</Display>
</Stuff>
</ItemGroup>
<Target Name="Batching">
<Message Text="@(Stuff)" Condition=" '%(Display)' == 'true' "/>
</Target>
</Project>
Well-known item metadata
When an item is added to an item type, that item is assigned some well-known metadata. For example, all items have the well-known metadata %(<Filename>), whose value is the file name of the item (without the extension). For more information, see Well-known item metadata.
Transform item types by using metadata
You can transform item lists into new item lists by using metadata. For example, you can transform an item type CppFiles
that has items that represent .cpp files into a corresponding list of .obj files by using the expression @(CppFiles -> '%(Filename).obj')
.
The following code creates a CultureResource
item type that contains copies of all EmbeddedResource
items with Culture
metadata. The Culture
metadata value becomes the value of the new metadata CultureResource.TargetDirectory
.
<Target Name="ProcessCultureResources">
<ItemGroup>
<CultureResource Include="@(EmbeddedResource)"
Condition="'%(EmbeddedResource.Culture)' != ''">
<TargetDirectory>%(EmbeddedResource.Culture) </TargetDirectory>
</CultureResource>
</ItemGroup>
</Target>
For more operations on items, see MSBuild item functions and Transforms.
Item definitions
Starting in the .NET Framework 3.5, you can add default metadata to any item type by using the ItemDefinitionGroup element. Like well-known metadata, the default metadata is associated with all items of the item type that you specify. You can explicitly override default metadata in an item definition. For example, the following XML gives the Compile
items one.cs and three.cs the metadata BuildDay
with the value "Monday". The code gives the item two.cs the metadata BuildDay
with the value "Tuesday".
<ItemDefinitionGroup>
<Compile>
<BuildDay>Monday</BuildDay>
</Compile>
</ItemDefinitionGroup>
<ItemGroup>
<Compile Include="one.cs;three.cs" />
<Compile Include="two.cs">
<BuildDay>Tuesday</BuildDay>
</Compile>
</ItemGroup>
For more information, see Item definitions.
Attributes for items in an ItemGroup of a Target
Starting in the .NET Framework 3.5, Target
elements may contain ItemGroup elements that may contain item elements. The attributes in this section are valid when they are specified for an item in an ItemGroup
that's in a Target
.
Remove attribute
The Remove
attribute removes specific items (files) from the item type. This attribute was introduced in the .NET Framework 3.5 (inside targets only). Both inside and outside targets are supported starting in MSBuild 15.0.
The following example removes every .config file from the Compile item type.
<Target>
<ItemGroup>
<Compile Remove="*.config"/>
</ItemGroup>
</Target>
MatchOnMetadata attribute
The MatchOnMetadata
attribute is applicable only to Remove
attributes that reference other items (for example, Remove="@(Compile);@(Content)"
) and instructs the Remove operation to match items based on the values of specified metadata names, instead of matching based on the item values.
Matching rule for B Remove="@(A)" MatchOnMetadata="M"
: remove all items from B
that have metadata M
, whose metadata value V
for M
matches any item from A
with metadata M
of value V
.
<Project>
<ItemGroup>
<A Include='a1' M1='1' M2='a' M3="e"/>
<A Include='b1' M1='2' M2='x' M3="f"/>
<A Include='c1' M1='3' M2='y' M3="g"/>
<A Include='d1' M1='4' M2='b' M3="h"/>
<B Include='a2' M1='x' m2='c' M3="m"/>
<B Include='b2' M1='2' m2='x' M3="n"/>
<B Include='c2' M1='2' m2='x' M3="o"/>
<B Include='d2' M1='3' m2='y' M3="p"/>
<B Include='e2' M1='3' m2='Y' M3="p"/>
<B Include='f2' M1='4' M3="r"/>
<B Include='g2' M3="s"/>
<B Remove='@(A)' MatchOnMetadata='M1;M2'/>
</ItemGroup>
<Target Name="PrintEvaluation">
<Message Text="%(B.Identity) M1='%(B.M1)' M2='%(B.M2)' M3='%(B.M3)'" />
</Target>
</Project>
In the above example, item values b2
, c2
, and d2
are removed from item B
because:
b2
andc2
fromB
match againstb1
fromA
onM1=2
andM2=x
d2
fromB
matches againstc1
fromA
onM1=3
andM2=y
The Message
task outputs the following:
a2 M1='x' M2='c' M3='m'
e2 M1='3' M2='Y' M3='p'
f2 M1='4' M2='' M3='r'
g2 M1='' M2='' M3='s'
Example usage of MatchOnMetadata
from the msbuild common sdk:
<_TransitiveItemsToCopyToOutputDirectory Remove="@(_ThisProjectItemsToCopyToOutputDirectory)" MatchOnMetadata="TargetPath" MatchOnMetadataOptions="PathLike" />
The above line removes items from _TransitiveItemsToCopyToOutputDirectory
that have the same TargetPath
metadata values from items in _ThisProjectItemsToCopyToOutputDirectory
MatchOnMetadataOptions attribute
Specifies the string matching strategy used by MatchOnMetadata
for matching the metadata values between items (metadata names are always matched case insensitive). Possible values are CaseSensitive
, CaseInsensitive
, or PathLike
. The default value is CaseSensitive
.
PathLike
applies path aware normalization to the values like normalizing slash orientations, ignoring trailing slashes, eliminating .
and ..
, and making all relative paths absolute against the current directory.
KeepMetadata attribute
If an item is generated within a target, the item element can contain the KeepMetadata
attribute. If this attribute is specified, only the metadata that is specified in the semicolon-delimited list of names will be transferred from the source item to the target item. An empty value for this attribute is equivalent to not specifying it. The KeepMetadata
attribute was introduced in the .NET Framework 4.5.
The following example illustrates how to use the KeepMetadata
attribute.
<Project xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/developer/msbuild/2003"
ToolsVersion="4.0">
<ItemGroup>
<FirstItem Include="rhinoceros">
<Class>mammal</Class>
<Size>large</Size>
</FirstItem>
</ItemGroup>
<Target Name="MyTarget">
<ItemGroup>
<SecondItem Include="@(FirstItem)" KeepMetadata="Class" />
</ItemGroup>
<Message Text="FirstItem: %(FirstItem.Identity)" />
<Message Text=" Class: %(FirstItem.Class)" />
<Message Text=" Size: %(FirstItem.Size)" />
<Message Text="SecondItem: %(SecondItem.Identity)" />
<Message Text=" Class: %(SecondItem.Class)" />
<Message Text=" Size: %(SecondItem.Size)" />
</Target>
</Project>
<!--
Output:
FirstItem: rhinoceros
Class: mammal
Size: large
SecondItem: rhinoceros
Class: mammal
Size:
-->
RemoveMetadata attribute
If an item is generated within a target, the item element can contain the RemoveMetadata
attribute. If this attribute is specified, all metadata is transferred from the source item to the target item except metadata whose names are contained in the semicolon-delimited list of names. An empty value for this attribute is equivalent to not specifying it. The RemoveMetadata
attribute was introduced in the .NET Framework 4.5.
The following example illustrates how to use the RemoveMetadata
attribute.
<Project ToolsVersion="4.0" xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/developer/msbuild/2003">
<PropertyGroup>
<MetadataToRemove>Size;Material</MetadataToRemove>
</PropertyGroup>
<ItemGroup>
<Item1 Include="stapler">
<Size>medium</Size>
<Color>black</Color>
<Material>plastic</Material>
</Item1>
</ItemGroup>
<Target Name="MyTarget">
<ItemGroup>
<Item2 Include="@(Item1)" RemoveMetadata="$(MetadataToRemove)" />
</ItemGroup>
<Message Text="Item1: %(Item1.Identity)" />
<Message Text=" Size: %(Item1.Size)" />
<Message Text=" Color: %(Item1.Color)" />
<Message Text=" Material: %(Item1.Material)" />
<Message Text="Item2: %(Item2.Identity)" />
<Message Text=" Size: %(Item2.Size)" />
<Message Text=" Color: %(Item2.Color)" />
<Message Text=" Material: %(Item2.Material)" />
</Target>
</Project>
<!--
Output:
Item1: stapler
Size: medium
Color: black
Material: plastic
Item2: stapler
Size:
Color: black
Material:
-->
For more operations on items, see MSBuild item functions.
KeepDuplicates attribute
If an item is generated within a target, the item element can contain the KeepDuplicates
attribute. KeepDuplicates
is a Boolean
attribute that specifies whether an item should be added to the target group if the item is an exact duplicate of an existing item.
If the source and target item have the same Include value but different metadata, the item is added even if KeepDuplicates
is set to false
. An empty value for this attribute is equivalent to not specifying it. The KeepDuplicates
attribute was introduced in the .NET Framework 4.5.
The following example illustrates how to use the KeepDuplicates
attribute.
<Project ToolsVersion="4.0" xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/developer/msbuild/2003">
<ItemGroup>
<Item1 Include="hourglass;boomerang" />
<Item2 Include="hourglass;boomerang" />
</ItemGroup>
<Target Name="MyTarget">
<ItemGroup>
<Item1 Include="hourglass" KeepDuplicates="false" />
<Item2 Include="hourglass" />
</ItemGroup>
<Message Text="Item1: @(Item1)" />
<Message Text=" %(Item1.Identity) Count: @(Item1->Count())" />
<Message Text="Item2: @(Item2)" />
<Message Text=" %(Item2.Identity) Count: @(Item2->Count())" />
</Target>
</Project>
<!--
Output:
Item1: hourglass;boomerang
hourglass Count: 1
boomerang Count: 1
Item2: hourglass;boomerang;hourglass
hourglass Count: 2
boomerang Count: 1
-->
Updating metadata on items in an ItemGroup outside of a Target
Items outside of targets can have their existing metadata updated via the Update
attribute. This attribute is not available for items under targets.
<Project>
<PropertyGroup>
<MetadataToUpdate>pencil</MetadataToUpdate>
</PropertyGroup>
<ItemGroup>
<Item1 Include="stapler">
<Size>medium</Size>
<Color>black</Color>
<Material>plastic</Material>
</Item1>
<Item1 Include="pencil">
<Size>small</Size>
<Color>yellow</Color>
<Material>wood</Material>
</Item1>
<Item1 Include="eraser">
<Color>red</Color>
</Item1>
<Item1 Include="notebook">
<Size>large</Size>
<Color>white</Color>
<Material>paper</Material>
</Item1>
<Item2 Include="notebook">
<Size>SMALL</Size>
<Color>YELLOW</Color>
</Item2>
<!-- Metadata can be expressed either as attributes or as elements -->
<Item1 Update="$(MetadataToUpdate);stapler;er*r;@(Item2)" Price="10" Material="">
<Color>RED</Color>
</Item1>
</ItemGroup>
<Target Name="MyTarget">
<Message Text="Item1: %(Item1.Identity)
Size: %(Item1.Size)
Color: %(Item1.Color)
Material: %(Item1.Material)
Price: %(Item1.Price)" />
</Target>
</Project>
<!--
Item1: stapler
Size: medium
Color: RED
Material:
Price: 10
Item1: pencil
Size: small
Color: RED
Material:
Price: 10
Item1: eraser
Size:
Color: RED
Material:
Price: 10
Item1: notebook
Size: large
Color: RED
Material:
Price: 10
-->
Updating metadata on items in an ItemGroup of a Target
Metadata can be modified inside targets too, by a less expressive syntax than Update
:
<Project>
<ItemGroup>
<Item1 Include="stapler">
<Size>medium</Size>
<Color>black</Color>
<Material>plastic</Material>
</Item1>
<Item1 Include="pencil">
<Size>small</Size>
<Color>yellow</Color>
<Material>wood</Material>
</Item1>
<Item1 Include="eraser">
<Size>small</Size>
<Color>red</Color>
<Material>gum</Material>
</Item1>
<Item1 Include="notebook">
<Size>large</Size>
<Color>white</Color>
<Material>paper</Material>
</Item1>
<Item2 Include="pencil">
<Size>MEDIUM</Size>
<Color>RED</Color>
<Material>PLASTIC</Material>
<Price>10</Price>
</Item2>
<Item2 Include="ruler">
<Color>GREEN</Color>
</Item2>
</ItemGroup>
<Target Name="MyTarget">
<ItemGroup>
<!-- Metadata can be expressed either as attributes or as elements -->
<Item1 Size="GIGANTIC" Color="%(Item2.Color)">
<Material Condition="'%(Item2.Material)' != ''">Premium %(Item2.Material)</Material>
</Item1>
</ItemGroup>
<Message Text="Item1: %(Item1.Identity)
Size: %(Item1.Size)
Color: %(Item1.Color)
Material: %(Item1.Material)
Price: %(Item1.Price)
Model: %(Item1.Model)" />
</Target>
</Project>
<!--
Item1: stapler
Size: GIGANTIC
Color: GREEN
Material: Premium PLASTIC
Price:
Model:
Item1: pencil
Size: GIGANTIC
Color: GREEN
Material: Premium PLASTIC
Price:
Model:
Item1: eraser
Size: GIGANTIC
Color: GREEN
Material: Premium PLASTIC
Price:
Model:
Item1: notebook
Size: GIGANTIC
Color: GREEN
Material: Premium PLASTIC
Price:
Model:
-->