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NuGet Packages are missing

I searched this problem but none of the solutions worked. I have Visual Studio Professional 2015 installed and I am using TFS. My NuGet version is 3.1.6. This problem is happening only in my C# Web API/MVC project.

I am getting the below error:

This project references NuGet package(s) that are missing on this computer. Use NuGet Package Restore to download them. For more information, see http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=322105. The missing file is ..\packages\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.1.0.0\build\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.props

I do not have .nuget folder in my solutions. I have a packages folder in the solution and when I delete it, it seems like NuGet does rebuild the dependencies but the project still has the above error. I tried removing the project from TFS and it didn't fix it. Along with the above error, all the references in the project have yellow warning signs and say they are missing. When I checked the NuGet Package Manager for the project, everything that is "missing" has a green tick next to it, including Microsoft.Net.Compilers. I tried adding a new Web API/MVC project and it faced a similar problem where most references such as Owin were "missing" with the yellow warning sign.

votes to close this question due to the shear amount of low quality posted answers by new users.

V
Vadim Kotov

I solved my issue by removing this code from .csproj file:

<Target Name="EnsureNuGetPackageBuildImports" BeforeTargets="PrepareForBuild">
  <PropertyGroup>
    <ErrorText>This project references NuGet package(s) that are missing on this computer. Enable NuGet Package Restore to download them.  For more information, see http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=322105. The missing file is {0}.</ErrorText>
  </PropertyGroup>
  <Error Condition="!Exists('$(SolutionDir)\.nuget\NuGet.targets')" Text="$([System.String]::Format('$(ErrorText)', '$(SolutionDir)\.nuget\NuGet.targets'))" />
</Target>

Accepted answer would not work since I am referencing the project in multiple separate solutions. This was the only fix. Commented it out and it worked like a a charm.
I could be wrong, but I believe this is "swatting the fly with the hammer". If, for whatever reason, the published location loses any other required nuget package, it will not error, giving you a false positive (i.e. deployment succeeds, but system fails). Not a fan, but I'm not going to downvote it because there are aspects of nuget I'm still not familiar with.
This also worked for me. Odd that the error message was hard-coded in the proj file itself ...
Confirmed this issue still exists in VS 2017. I migrated a project from visual studio 2015 to 2017 and got this error message upon first compile in 2017. This fixed the bug.
Why delete functionality, risk your project breaking etc by doing this? As @HeyZiko points out this can lead to problems later on. I could just do what the error states "Enable package restore". See my answer somewhere on this page...
L
Lee Taylor

I had the same error (missing exactly the same package) today. I also created a MVC + Web API project.

It happened because I moved the app files (including the .csproj) file to another location. I manually updated the .sln file but all packages dependencies are now (Visual Studio 2015) stored in .csproj file.

Editing the .csproj file and correcting the relative path to the solution folder (which contains the packages folder) solved the problem for me.


Copying the Microsoft.Net.Compilers... folder from the old packages folder to the new packages location after a move if it is missing may be a final step required.
I just removed that ONE package from my computer and it worked.
I also got the error when physically moving a project to a different location in the Visual Studio solution. None of the solutions on this page worked, so I made a copy of the project (on the file system) and completely removed all reference to the original project in VS. I then recreated the project and copied the bits and pieces into it (from the copy I made). Laborious, but it worked.
I also had the same issue after moving project from one location to another. Fixing path of the packages in the ".csproj" file fixed the issue.
@MiłoszWieczorek I tried running the command in Package Manager Console and it did not solve the issue. It reloaded all packages, but the references are still not found.
C
Community

BEWARE - this updates packages for the entire solution not just the project.

If you have one more missing nuget package that giving your error while building your solution use following command using Nuget Command Console from Tools > Nuget Package Manager > Package Manager Console. It will reinstall your all current packages.

Update-Package –reinstall

Update:

You can pass specific project name as a parameter.

Update-Package –reinstall -ProjectName SampleApp

This worked for me. The error popped up after for me after pushing changes through git on one system and pulling them on another. Maybe my .gitignore is not properly configured for nuget packages.
Beware ... this updates packages for the entire solution not just the project.
This worked for me. NuGet kept complaining about missing packages, but Visual Studio would not auto-resolve. It took a couple minutes to run completely, but this command fixed my problem.
You can add -ProjectName parameter to make it only for specific project, not entire solution.
VS2017 crashed half way through this and it broke everything
R
Ryan Russon

I had this exact frustrating message. What finally worked for me was deleting all files and folders inside /packages and letting VS re-fetch everything the next build.


I did a right click on the Solution and Restore Nuget Packages.
I donot have any Restore Nuget Package when I right click on solution.... I am using VS 2013..
also had to make sure that it restores to the right package. check the .csproj using note/Edit *.csproj for the location of the packages folder
A
Abdullah

this way solved my error : To open .csproj file for update in Visual Studio 2015+ Solution Explorer:

Right-click project name -> Unload Project

Right-click project name -> Edit .csproj

Remove the following lines :

<Target Name="EnsureNuGetPackageBuildImports" BeforeTargets="PrepareForBuild">
    <PropertyGroup>
      <ErrorText>This project references NuGet package(s) that are missing on this computer. Use NuGet Package Restore to download them.  For more information, see http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=322105. The missing file is {0}.</ErrorText>
    </PropertyGroup>
    <Error Condition="!Exists('..\packages\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.1.0.0\build\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.props')" Text="$([System.String]::Format('$(ErrorText)', '..\packages\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.1.0.0\build\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.props'))" />
    <Error Condition="!Exists('..\packages\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.1.0.0\build\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.props')" Text="$([System.String]::Format('$(ErrorText)', '..\packages\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.1.0.0\build\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.props'))" />
    <Error Condition="!Exists('packages\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.1.0.0\build\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.props')" Text="$([System.String]::Format('$(ErrorText)', 'packages\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.1.0.0\build\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.props'))" />
    <Error Condition="!Exists('packages\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.1.0.0\build\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.props')" Text="$([System.String]::Format('$(ErrorText)', 'packages\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.1.0.0\build\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.props'))" />
  </Target>

Right-click project name -> Reload Project

Finally Build your solution.


After fixing manually the paths in csproj I removed the section EnsureNuGetPackageBuildImports and it worked perfectly. thanks
Worked for me. A bit overkill but other options didn't fix the issue.
Those conditions are checking that packages exists in two places. (a bit odd, one is enough). A better alternative to deleting them is to fix the path to point to the actual packages folder. It's relative. Your package folder is likely ..\..\packages or ..\..\..\packages or similar.
T
Tom Stickel

Tiberiu is correct. I had to edit my .csproj file as the files were moved and caused this issue

 <Import Project="..\..\packages\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.1.0.1\build\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.props" Condition="Exists('..\..\packages\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.1.0.1\build\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.props')" />

I changed at top of the file and at the bottom

<Error Condition="!Exists('..\..\packages\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.1.0.0\build\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.props')" Text="$([System.String]::Format('$(ErrorText)', '..\..\packages\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.1.0.0\build\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.props'))" />
<Error Condition="!Exists('..\..\packages\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.1.0.1\build\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.props')" Text="$([System.String]::Format('$(ErrorText)', '..\..\packages\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.1.0.1\build\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.props'))" />

what did work for me in the end was to edit only the line at the end of the file, but not at the top
M
Mohsin Awan

I solved this issue by removing the following code from .csproj file

<Target Name="EnsureNuGetPackageBuildImports" BeforeTargets="PrepareForBuild">
<PropertyGroup>
  <ErrorText>This project references NuGet package(s) that are missing on this computer. Use NuGet Package Restore to download them.  For more information, see http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=322105. The missing file is {0}.</ErrorText>
</PropertyGroup>
<Error Condition="!Exists('..\..\..\Assemblies\NuGet\SpecFlow.Plus.Excel.1.4.2\build\SpecFlow.Plus.Excel.targets')" Text="$([System.String]::Format('$(ErrorText)', '..\..\..\Assemblies\NuGet\SpecFlow.Plus.Excel.1.4.2\build\SpecFlow.Plus.Excel.targets'))" />


But why where these wrong in the first place? Bug in Visual Studio?
i
innoSPG

A combination of the 2 answers worked for me. First I modified the .csproj file to remove the reference to 1.0.0 version

< Target Name="EnsureNuGetPackageBuildImports" BeforeTargets="PrepareForBuild" >

  ----Error---

< /Target>

and then did

Update-Package -Reinstall

from the and it worked.


K
Karthik

I solved the same issue with the following steps

Removed package from package.config file. Edit the .csproj project file and removed the below settings. This project references NuGet package(s) that are missing on this computer. Use NuGet Package Restore to download them. For more information, see http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=322105. The missing file is {0}. Go to package manager console and run the command Update-Package –reinstall

Point # 2 and 3 were given by other users and I appreciate those users. Point # 1, removing the Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform from package.config file is more important. Also, after running the command mentioned in point #3, the issue resolved. All unwanted packages removed and required package reference updated.

Hope this helps someone.


J
JWP

For me, the problem was that when I copied the solution to a new folder and opened it, it was missing the Nuget folder as shown below. I copied this folder over and everything worked. Note: This same folder was in our source control but not in this solutions project, it was up one directory.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/n2N7B.png


B
Brian Vander Plaats

To expand on a few of the answers here, yes you could remove the following block from your .csproj file:

<Target Name="EnsureNuGetPackageBuildImports" BeforeTargets="PrepareForBuild">

and this fixes the issue, however in my case, I noticed that I had additional references to the .NET.Compilers and .CodeDom.Providers with different versions:

<Error Condition="!Exists('..\packages\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.1.0.0
<Error Condition="!Exists('..\packages\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.1.0.0\

<Error Condition="!Exists('..\packages\Microsoft.Net.Compilers.2.0.1
<Error Condition="!Exists('..\packages\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.1.0.3\

When my packages.config only referenced the following:

<package id="Microsoft.Net.Compilers" version="2.0.1"
<package id="Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform" version="1.0.3"

Removing the 1.0.0 items from the .csproj file fixed the issue.


This also applies when there is a rogue error condition referring to 3.5.0 when it has been updated to 3.7.0.
C
Caspar Kleijne

Just enable NuGet Package Restore. Right click your solution > choose 'Enable NuGet Package Restore'.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/CXtf7.jpg

This will create the .nuget folder with NuGet.Config file and fixed my problem.


Thanks!! I too faced similar situation, and 'Enable NuGet Package Restore' worked.
It didn't wok for me, it says "All packages are already installed and there is nothing to restore."
M
MAK

I am using VS2012 and facing the same error. I removed the following Target tag from the .csproj file and it started compiling without any error.

<Target Name="EnsureNuGetPackageBuildImports" BeforeTargets="PrepareForBuild">
  -- Error messages within Target Tag
</Target>

m
madannes

For anyone who stumbles here with the issue I had (some but not all packages being restored on a build server), the final piece of the puzzle for me was adding a NuGet.config in the root of my solution, sibling to the .SLN file as David Ebbo explained here: http://blog.davidebbo.com/2014/01/the-right-way-to-restore-nuget-packages.html.

From Ebbo's blog post, the file contents for me are simply

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<configuration>
  <packageSources>
    <add key="nuget.org" value="https://www.nuget.org/api/v2/" />
  </packageSources>
</configuration>

UPDATE:

The NuGet API URL has changed for v3 (current as of Sept 2016). From https://www.nuget.org/

<add key="nuget.org" value="https://api.nuget.org/v3/index.json" />

P
Peter Ennis

The error message is completely correct. I tried all the tricks and none worked. The project (simple MVC Web App test) moved from Windows 8.1 VS 2015 Community to my new test box on Windows 10. All the latest updates to VS 2015 applied. I could not even install any newer version of the compilers package.

Loop:
<LOOP>This seems to be a Ground Hog Day phenomena.</LOOP>
GoTo Loop

I finally just copied Microsoft.Net.Compilers.1.0.0 from the old project into the new one and it worked. I could then start to update other packages to newer version. Looks like a nuget project upgrade process bug to me.

NOTE: The original project was created in VS 2015 and does not have any legacy nuget methodologies.


C
Community

Solution that works in my case - Visual Studio 2015 Enterprice, project .NET 4.6.1

Upgrade to Update 3 Install Web developer tools

https://i.stack.imgur.com/alpUM.png


I
Ian Hale

For me, the packages were there under the correct path, but the build folders inside the package folder were not. I simply removed all the packages that it said were missing and rebuilt the solution and it successfully created the build folders and the .props files. So the error messages were correct in informing me that something was a miss.


N
Neil Thompson

I had this issue as a failed build in Azure, when deployed from Git.

Turns out my .gitignore was excluding the build folder from ..\packages\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.2.0.0\build\net46\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.props.

Once the build folder was (force) committed to Git, the issue was solved.


b
bsod_

For me my gitignore file was ignoring my packages folder. The following gitignore line was causing the issue -

**/packages/*

Removed and it restored my packages folder. Hope this helps someone else.


N
Nick Rubino

I couldn't find any solutions to this so I added a copy of the nuget.exe and a powershell script to the root directory of the solution called prebuild.ps1 with the following content.

$nugetexe = 'nuget.exe'
$args = 'restore SOLUTION_NAME_HERE.sln'
Start-Process $nugetexe -ArgumentList $args

https://i.stack.imgur.com/loH2P.jpg


u
user1429899

Mine worked when I copied packages folder along with solution file and project folder. I just did not copy packages folder from previous place.


P
Parama Dharmika

You can also use the suggested error message as a hint. Here's how, find the Manage Packages for Solution, and click on the resolve missing nuget package.

That's it


A
Anurag Sharma

Comment the Compiler Option in WebConfig:

<!--<system.codedom>
<compilers>
  <compiler language="c#;cs;csharp" extension=".cs" type="Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.CSharpCodeProvider, Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform, Version=1.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=31bf3856ad364e35" warningLevel="4" compilerOptions="/langversion:6 /nowarn:1659;1699;1701" />
  <compiler language="vb;vbs;visualbasic;vbscript" extension=".vb" type="Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.VBCodeProvider, Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform, Version=1.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=31bf3856ad364e35" warningLevel="4" compilerOptions="/langversion:14 /nowarn:41008 /define:_MYTYPE=\&quot;Web\&quot; /optionInfer+" />
</compilers>
</system.codedom>-->

Update the Latest Version of Packages in Package Config File

  <package id="Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform" version="1.0.4" targetFramework="net452" />

Rebuild if all ok, no need to proceed, else Right-click the project, click 'unload project' Right-click the project again and edit .csproj file

Validate the path of Codedom, it was not having net45 in previous paths, add that manually, save, load, rebuild. It should work.

<Import Project="..\packages\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.1.0.4\build\net45\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.props" Condition="Exists('..\packages\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.1.0.4\build\net45\Microsoft.CodeDom.Providers.DotNetCompilerPlatform.props')" />

S
Saravanan

As many suggested removing the <Target> tag may make it compile-able. Yet, beware of the fact that it has a side effect when you do it for test projects.

I got error related to MSTest.TestAdapter nuget package while compiling. Resolved that issue by removing <Target> tag. Though it made build successful, test methods became non discover-able. Test explorer won't list down the test methods in that project and Run Test or Debug Test won't work as well.

I encountered this while using Visual Studio 2017 and .Net framework 4.7, it can very well happen in other versions


I've exactly that problem using VS2017, .Net4.7 and a unit testing project. That project is added to multiple solutions. The automatic restore works but to the wrong place. Replace with $(SolutionDir) work but update failes. I asked that here. Do you have any solution found?
p
pkr

The issue for me was that NuGet couldn't automatically get/update the packages because the full file path would be too large. Fixed by moving my solution to a folder in my Documents instead of a deeply nested folder.

Then can right-click on solution and select "Restore NuGet Packages" (which probably isn't necessary if you just build it and let it do it for you), and then select "Manage NuGet Packages for Solution" to get all the packages updated to the latest version.

This was for a solution of a sample ASP MVC application downloaded from Microsoft's web site.


k
kayleeFrye_onDeck

For DevOps/build engineers, you can probably fix this running nuget restore against the affected SLN, or project if you lack a SLN. I have to do this for our CI/CD builds for all our UWP projects.

Make sure nuget is installed on the build slave either in Visual Studio or standalone. If it's the latter, make sure it's in PATH and skip step 2. Either open the VS Dev CMD console, or load it via an already open one, which you can do with the instructions below: VS2015 call "%VS140COMNTOOLS%VsDevCmd.bat" or VS2017 call "%ProgramFiles(x86)%\Microsoft Visual Studio\2017\Enterprise\Common7\Tools\VsDevCmd.bat" call nuget restore MyStuff.SLN or call nuget restore MyStuff.csproj if there's no SLN.


c
chersull_99

Not sure if this will help anyone, but I had this issue come up when I deleted the source code from my local machine without having ever saved the solution file to TFS. (During initial development, I was right-clicking and checking in the project in Solution Explorer, but forgot to ever check in the solution itself.) When I needed to work on this again, all I had in TFS was the .csproj file, no .sln file. So in VS I did a File --> Source Control --> Advanced -- Open from Server and opened the .csproj file. From there I did a Save All and it asked me where I wanted to save the .sln file. I was saving this .sln file to the project directory with the other folders (App_Data, App_Start, etc.), not the top level directory. I finally figured out that I need to save the .sln file up a directory from the project folder so it's on the same level as the project folder. All my paths resolved and I was able to build it again.


I
Irshad Ahmed Akhonzada

I got a fix around this error, actually I was having a different version of MSTest.TestAdapter(1.3.2) in my packages folder and in .csproj file references were pointing to MSTest.TestAdapter(1.1.0). I have replaced all the MSTest.TestAdapter(1.1.0) to MSTest.TestAdapter(1.3.2), and this resolved my issue.


J
J.P. Sietsma

I realize this question is old, however I ran into this same situation today and wanted to throw in my 2 cents for anyone recent finding this issue. An ASP MVC project I had manually moved to a subfolder in my solution and then removed and readded to the solution, using Visual Studio 2017, was giving the error mentioned. Moving the "lib" and "packages" folders to the root of the same subfolder as the MVC project fixed my issue.


b
bmontalvo

I was having the same issue, it turns out one of the projects I was referencing was outside the solution directory (and therefore didn't share the same '/packages' folder). The solution that worked for me was to open the reference project's solution and build it there. Once that project built, the errors went away.