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I'm working on a WCF service. The WCF service interface and implementation are in separate projects. There's also a Windows service project to host the WCF service.

One of the things the WCF service implementation needs to do is call out to several external (SOAP) web services. The way we typically structure this is we create a separate class library project for the SOAP service(s); we'll create a Web reference and a factory/helper method in the class library.

The above detail may or may not be pertinent to the real problem. Which is that I get an error when building the WCF service implementation project (where X is one of the SOAP service wrapper assemblies):

referenced assembly 'X' does not have a strong name

But the WCF service implementation project isn't set to be signed (nor is the interface project). And at this point the only two things referencing it are the Windows service project and a unit test project -- and neither of those is signed either.

The WCF implementation also references other (pre-existing) web service wrapper projects, but it's only complaining about these two. I've pulled up an existing and a new project file in a text editor side by side... And I can's see any significant differences.

I've also checked whether any of the projects is importing a setting that requires it to be signed, as described in Stack Overflow question Remove signing from an assembly. That doesn't appear to be the case.

I was attempting to use AutoMapper -- 1.1 since we're still on .NET 3.5 -- in my WCF implementation. That is a signed assembly, so I can see where it might have a problem reflecting on my code and the SOAP service wrappers. But it seems to me that would be a run-time problem, not build time. But because I suspected it might be at least a contributing factor, I removed AutoMapper and the dependent code but I still get the same error.

I have researched the issue, most of the search results consist of instructions on how to sign (possibly third-party) assemblies.

I've tried removing and re-adding the references, restarted Visual Studio and my PC.

Visual Studio 2010 / .NET 3.5 on Windows 7 64-bit.

I'm sure I'm missing something fairly obvious ... I just can't figure out what.

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Well ... this is embarrassing.

As I suspected, it was something simple. The service interface and implementation were in fact set to be signed; I was incorrect about that. However, this was done not in the project settings/file, but in the AssemblyInfo.cs file, via the directive [assembly: AssemblyKeyFile("keyfile.snk")].

I was not familiar with this method of signing. I gather it's been deprecated since VS2005 -- partially because it's more straightforward to manage signing via the project properties, partially because putting this information into the AssemblyInfo is considered a security risk.

And I had in fact looked at at least one of the AssemblyInfo files ... but apparently I didn't scroll down far enough. (I said it was embarrassing.)

Hopefully someone else can benefit from this.

于 2013-12-27T03:07:26.347 回答
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You can not reference an unsigned assembly from a signed assembly, the project which fails to build should be the one that has a strong name key tied to it.

It is possible that you have a signed version of one of your references in the Global Assembly Cache that MSBuild is picking up instead of the reference you selected.

于 2013-09-20T11:43:11.523 回答