Updated with a solution that works for me. See the bottom of this question.
Context:
I needed a way to evaluate the size of a generic type for the p
There is a very good example of how to do it correctly in the DotNet CoreFX repo. System.Runtime.CompilerServices.Unsafe is an IL only assembly and can be used by .NET Core and Xamarin.
https://github.com/dotnet/corefx/tree/master/src/System.Runtime.CompilerServices.Unsafe
There are two approaches to the problem: (i) try to recreate required elements of the build configuration in your project from scratch - what will be time consuming and very involved - corefx build system is really complex, (ii) use existing build infrastructure and create your IL project inside .NET Core CoreFX repo by replicating System.Runtime.CompilerServices.Unsafe
project, changing naming and and replacing IL code with yours. In my opinion this is the fastest way to build IL based assembly which will be guaranteed to work properly with all targets.
To build your assembly while targeting any particular version of .NET Core or .NET Standard just create it in the release branches: release/2.0.0
, release/1.1.0
etc.
The type 'Object' is defined in an assembly that is not referenced. You must add a reference to assembly 'System.Runtime, Version=0.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=null'.
There is an option to try for suppressing that compilation error alone in a project referencing assembly that triggers it. Putting the following property to a new format csproj/vbproj should suppress it:
<_HasReferenceToSystemRuntime>true