Fetching packages from the NuGet feed
You may fetch the packaged .NET DeviceAPI from a NuGet feed by means of client tools.
To that end, please pick the feed address of the company you would like to be a customer at.
Company | address | address without TLS |
---|---|---|
StepOver GmbH | https://stepoverinfo.net:44331/nuget | http://stepoverinfo.net:44330/nuget |
StepOver International GmbH | https://stepoverinfo.net:44341/nuget | http://stepoverinfo.net:44340/nuget |
.NET-Framework projects
might require strongly-named assemblies.
In that case, also install the StrongNamer package.
This adds an open-source build tool that strongly-names assemblies that lack one
as part of the build process.
VisualStudio2019
has a package manager that can do this.
It needs to be told the feed address.
Feed sources can be edited under Tools->Options->NuGet Package Manager.
The same editor can also be reached from the gear wheel depicted next to the selected package source
inside the package manager tab shown here
Add the new feed source to the list of package sources and select it.
Then you can install and update the packages from our feed to your projects
in a similar fashion as demonstrated in the Quickstart: Install and use a package in Visual Studio.
.NET CLI
Assuming the StepOver feed, the statement
dotnet nuget add source https://stepoverinfo.net:44331/nuget --name StepOverFeed
adds the StepOverFeed to the list of package sources.
The resulting list of package sources could be printed as follows
dotnet nuget list source
Then, in a .NET project directory
dotnet add package SigDeviceAPI
adds a package reference to the .NET-DeviceAPI.
For example, the statements
mkdir TestProject cd TestProject dotnet new console dotnet add package SigDeviceAPI
create a new .NET console application and add a package reference to the DeviceAPI.
Clearing the local http-cache of the NuGet client
There are situations in which the local caching prevents the NuGet client
from discovering new packages recently added to the feeds.
Using the .NET CLI, the statement
dotnet nuget locals http-cache --clear
clears the local http-cache.
Using nuget.exe, the statement
nuget locals http-cache -clear
has the same effect.