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Use Microsoft XML Serializer Generator on .NET Core

In this tutorial, you learn how to use the Microsoft XML Serializer Generator in a C# application. During the course of this tutorial, you learn:

  • How to create a .NET console app
  • How to add a reference to the Microsoft.XmlSerializer.Generator package
  • How to edit your MyApp.csproj to add dependencies
  • How to add a class and an XmlSerializer
  • How to build and run the application

Like the Xml Serializer Generator (sgen.exe) for .NET Framework, the Microsoft.XmlSerializer.Generator NuGet package is the equivalent for .NET Core/.NET 5+ and .NET Standard projects. It creates an XML serialization assembly for types contained in an assembly to improve the startup performance of XML serialization when serializing or de-serializing objects of those types using XmlSerializer.

Prerequisites

To complete this tutorial:

Tip

Need to install a code editor? Try Visual Studio!

The following instructions show you how to use XML Serializer Generator in a .NET Core console application.

Create the app

  1. Open a command prompt and create a folder named MyApp. Navigate to the folder you created and type the following command:

    dotnet new console
    
  2. Use the dotnet add package command to add a reference to the Microsoft.XmlSerializer.Generator package.

    dotnet add package Microsoft.XmlSerializer.Generator -v 8.0.0
    

    After running the dotnet add package command, the following lines are added to your MyApp.csproj project file:

    <ItemGroup>
       <PackageReference Include="Microsoft.XmlSerializer.Generator" Version="8.0.0" />
    </ItemGroup>
    
  3. Add a tool reference by adding the following ItemGroup section to your project file.

    <ItemGroup>
       <DotNetCliToolReference Include="Microsoft.XmlSerializer.Generator" Version="8.0.0" />
    </ItemGroup>
    
  4. Open Program.cs in your text editor. Add a class named MyClass in Program.cs.

    public class MyClass
    {
       public int Value;
    }
    
  5. Create an XmlSerializer for MyClass. Add the following line to the Program.cs file:

    var serializer = new System.Xml.Serialization.XmlSerializer(typeof(MyClass));
    
  6. Build and run the application. Run the application via dotnet run:

    dotnet run
    

    The app automatically loads and uses the pre-generated serializers at run time.

    Tip

    dotnet run calls dotnet build to ensure that the build targets have been built, and then calls dotnet <assembly.dll> to run the target application.

Important

The commands and steps shown in this tutorial to run your application are used during development time only. Once you're ready to deploy your app, take a look at the different deployment strategies for .NET apps and the dotnet publish command.

If everything succeeds, an assembly named MyApp.XmlSerializers.dll is generated in the output folder.

Congratulations! You have just:

  • Created a .NET console app.
  • Added a reference to the Microsoft.XmlSerializer.Generator package.
  • Edited your MyApp.csproj to add dependencies.
  • Added a class and an XmlSerializer.
  • Built and run the application.

Further customize XML serialization assembly (optional)

Add the following XML to your MyApp.csproj to further customize assembly generation:

<PropertyGroup>
    <SGenReferences>C:\myfolder\abc.dll;C:\myfolder\def.dll</SGenReferences>
    <SGenTypes>MyApp.MyClass;MyApp.MyClass1</SGenTypes>
    <SGenProxyTypes>false</SGenProxyTypes>
    <SGenVerbose>true</SGenVerbose>
    <SGenKeyFile>mykey.snk</SGenKeyFile>
    <SGenDelaySign>true</SGenDelaySign>
</PropertyGroup>