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Could not load file or assembly 'System.ComponentModel.Annotations, Version=4.1.0.0

I have a .NET Standard 1.4 class library that references the System.ComponentModel.Annotations (4.3.0) NuGet package.

I'm then referencing this class library from a .NET Framework 4.6.2 test project. It builds fine, but at runtime I get the following error:

System.IO.FileLoadException occurred HResult=0x80131040 Message=Could not load file or assembly 'System.ComponentModel.Annotations, Version=4.1.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a' or one of its dependencies. The located assembly's manifest definition does not match the assembly reference. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80131040)

I tried adding a reference to the System.ComponentModel.Annotations (4.3.0) NuGet package from the net462 project, but that didn't make any difference.

I tried adding a reference to the .NET Standard library from the net462 project, but still no luck.

Am I missing something here? Is this a known bug, if so is there a work around?

Any help is much appreciated!

use the bindingRedirect attribute in app.config to force usage of the 4.3.0.0 lib
For anybody missing Version=4.2.0.0: Installing System.ComponentModel.Annotations 4.4.1 from NuGet Gallery fixed it for me.
The problem seem to have worsened again in .Net Core 2.1 (used in combination with .Net 4.7.1). System.ComponentModel.Annotations 4.5.0 doesn't seem to be able to find Version=4.2.0.0 no more, forcing you to go back to bindingRedirect oldVersion="4.2.0.0" newVersion="4.0.0.0"/>. Strange that Microsoft is apparently not able to solve this issues with System.ComponentModel.Annotations. They are already there for nearly two years.
@JRB you suggestion did not work for me but an adjusted one. I ended up with <bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.2.0.0" newVersion="4.2.1.0" /> which fixed the problem.
@t3chb0t saved my life ! I was trying to use a .NET Standard 2.0 library from a .NET Framework 4.8 WebForms project and I was getting this error. After adding what you mention in the web.config, and adding the System.ComponentModel.Annotation v5.0.0 as nuget package to the project, everything worked OK. Thanks !

A
Aliaaa

In many cases, this can be solved by adding the following code to the csproj file of your test project:

<PropertyGroup>
  <AutoGenerateBindingRedirects>true</AutoGenerateBindingRedirects>
  <GenerateBindingRedirectsOutputType>true</GenerateBindingRedirectsOutputType>
</PropertyGroup>

This forces the build process to create a .dll.config file in the output directory with the needed binding redirects.

The reason is that "classic" csproj test projects are true "libraries" and are not considered to need binding redirects by default. But running unit tests requires this. This only becomes an issue if referenced projects need those redirects to work correctly. This usually works when directly installing all NuGet packages that the referenced library uses, but with the new PackageReference style of NuGet packages, it does not.

See other instances where this fix has helped:

Could not load file or assembly Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection.Abstractions, Version=1.1.0.0

When using .Net Standard 1.4 in a library and .Net framework 4.6.1 in and application, unable to load file System.IO.FileSystem, Version=4.0.1.0


This does not work with .NET 4.6.1 Web apps. This issue seems to be a constant problem when developing against a webapp. The only think I can do that worked was to recompile my webapp and unload it from the solution before debugging IIS manually. This is such a pain to deal with.
I can confirm that this does not work in .Net 4.6.1 web apps.
At my solution WPF - WCF - SQL server - I changed in app.config
The problem here is that in some more complex solutions autogenerating the BindingRedirects is not working correctly for "System.ComponentModel.Annotations", so your suggestion is helpful in general, but in this cases misses the point.
When you are installing anything above 4.2.0.0 in package manager the assembly version is actually 4.2.1.0 for EVERY single version above that. so the binding redirect that works is <bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.2.0.0" newVersion="4.2.1.0" /> even though you may have the 4.7.0 or 5.0.0 NuGet package installed. I think its a version compatibility thing that is a pain in the arse for hybrid framework / standard projects.
L
Lukasz Cokot

I had similar problem but none of the above answers helped me. It turns out that solution is very easy, I've just run following command in Package Manager:

Install-Package System.ComponentModel.Annotations -Version 4.1.0


No a very satisfactory solution, but this worked for me.
At the time of writing I had to use Version 4.4.1
G
Guillaume

In my case, I was using 4.0.0, so I fixed it by adding in

<runtime>
<assemblyBinding xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1">
  <dependentAssembly>
    <assemblyIdentity name="System.ComponentModel.Annotations"
                      publicKeyToken="b03f5f7f11d50a3a" culture="neutral" />
    <bindingRedirect oldVersion="4.1.0.0" newVersion="4.0.0.0"/>
  </dependentAssembly>

Adapt to your required version.


Btw if the change by my answer is applied, this binding redirect should be generated automatically by msbuild when it unifies assembly references during compilation.
thanks for me it was
In my case I created console application with .NET Framework 4.7.2, originally with a app.config transformationsm (for Debug/Release), then added Microsoft,EntityFrameworkCore.Sqlite 2.1.4 NuGet package, (VS 2017 15.8.5). It took me litle bit longer to find out, that the existing app.config transformations somehow broke the binding redirections at runtime. (After removing the transformations it was starting to work)
When you are installing anything above 4.2.0.0 in package manager the assembly version is actually 4.2.1.0 for EVERY single version above that. so the binding redirect that works is <bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.2.0.0" newVersion="4.2.1.0" /> even though you may have the 4.7.0 or 5.0.0 NuGet package installed. I think its a version compatibility thing that is a pain in the arse for hybrid framework / standard projects.
M
MiguelSlv

This usually happens when visual studio can't figure out the correct bindingRedirect.

Most likely the cause it that the version of the nugget does not match the version of the produced library.

To fix do this:

From package manage console do: Get-Project –All | Add-BindingRedirect to regenerate assemblyBinding configuration at the config file If didn't fix it, then add manually the binding redirection: where: X is the version that can't be load, from the error message Y is the version on your project references. To get it, select the library from the references node, and look for the version on property pane.


When you are installing anything above 4.2.0.0 in package manager the assembly version is actually 4.2.1.0 for EVERY single version above that. so the binding redirect that works is <bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.2.0.0" newVersion="4.2.1.0" /> even though you may have the 4.7.0 or 5.0.0 NuGet package installed. I think its a version compatibility thing that is a pain in the arse for hybrid framework / standard projects.
N
Neil

Got it working by using assembly redirection as described in: just invoke FunctionsAssemblyResolver.RedirectAssembly() in the begining of your program. https://stackoverflow.com/a/50776946/2705777

using System.Reflection;
using System.Diagnostics;
using System.Linq;

public class FunctionsAssemblyResolver
{
    public static void RedirectAssembly()
    {
        var list = AppDomain.CurrentDomain.GetAssemblies().OrderByDescending(a => a.FullName).Select(a => a.FullName).ToList();
        AppDomain.CurrentDomain.AssemblyResolve += CurrentDomain_AssemblyResolve;
    }

    private static Assembly CurrentDomain_AssemblyResolve(object sender, ResolveEventArgs args)
    {
        var requestedAssembly = new AssemblyName(args.Name);
        Assembly assembly = null;
        AppDomain.CurrentDomain.AssemblyResolve -= CurrentDomain_AssemblyResolve;
        try
        {
            assembly = Assembly.Load(requestedAssembly.Name);
        }
        catch (Exception ex)
        {
        }
        AppDomain.CurrentDomain.AssemblyResolve += CurrentDomain_AssemblyResolve;
        return assembly;
    }

}

This is basically what BenchmarkDotNet does. github.com/dotnet/BenchmarkDotNet/blob/…
When you are installing anything above 4.2.0.0 in package manager the assembly version is actually 4.2.1.0 for EVERY single version above that. so the binding redirect that works is <bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.2.0.0" newVersion="4.2.1.0" /> even though you may have the 4.7.0 or 5.0.0 NuGet package installed. I think its a version compatibility thing that is a pain in the arse for hybrid framework / standard projects.
s
smooveys

Credit to @MiguelSlv as my case had to do with using a proper binding redirect. However, be sure that when you deploy your app to beta or production that the binding redirect is in your deployed web.config (not just in your development environment). I ended up using the following binding redirect for the NuGet package System.ComponentModel.Annotations 5.0.0 that is used in a .NET Standard 2.0 class project being consumed by my **ASP.NET MVC web application (.NET Framework 4.7.1)

<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="System.ComponentModel.Annotations" publicKeyToken="b03f5f7f11d50a3a" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.2.1.0" newVersion="4.2.1.0" />
</dependentAssembly>

Note that 4.2.1.0 is the version shown under properties, while 5.0.0 is the NuGet package version.


When you are installing anything above 4.2.0.0 in package manager the assembly version is actually 4.2.1.0 for EVERY single version above that. so the binding redirect that works is <bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.2.0.0" newVersion="4.2.1.0" /> even though you may have the 4.7.0 or 5.0.0 NuGet package installed. I think its a version compatibility thing that is a pain in the arse for hybrid framework / standard projects.
This is the correct answer now a days.
u
user14918236

Fixed this by installing the same System.ComponentModel.Annotations version I want to use across all the projects in the solution.


E
Etienne Kaiser

Please Add below dependentAssembly in your web.Config or app.Config file

The following configuration is added under the configuration --> runtime --> assemblyBinding node under:

<dependentAssembly>
        <assemblyIdentity name="System.ComponentModel.Annotations" publicKeyToken="b03f5f7f11d50a3a" culture="neutral" />
        <bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.2.1.0" newVersion="4.2.1.0" />
      </dependentAssembly>

R
Rich

For me, none of the other solutions worked.

I resolved this by manually adding a reference to System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations myself (via project -> References), rather than letting Visual Studio handle it via the light-bulb quick-fix menu.


t
tcetin

Also for 4.2.0.0 version error this is fixed for me in web.config:

  <dependentAssembly>
    <assemblyIdentity name="System.ComponentModel.Annotations" publicKeyToken="b03f5f7f11d50a3a" culture="neutral" />
    <bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-4.2.1.0" newVersion="4.6.0" />
  </dependentAssembly>
</assemblyBinding> 

u
user1605822

I fixed this error by doing the Clean Solution command in Visual Studio 2019.


b
budul

I have this issue by implementing a helper function redirecting the assembly at the begin (which was suggested in this answer):

public static class FunctionsAssemblyResolver
{
    #region Public Methods

    public static void RedirectAssembly()
    {
        AppDomain.CurrentDomain.AssemblyResolve += ResolveAssemblyOnCurrentDomain;
    }

    #endregion Public Methods

    #region Private Methods

    private static Assembly ResolveAssemblyOnCurrentDomain(object sender, ResolveEventArgs args)
    {
        var requestedAssembly = new AssemblyName(args.Name);
        var assembly = default(Assembly);

        AppDomain.CurrentDomain.AssemblyResolve -= ResolveAssemblyOnCurrentDomain;

        try
        {
            assembly = Assembly.Load(requestedAssembly.Name);
        }
        catch
        { }

        AppDomain.CurrentDomain.AssemblyResolve += ResolveAssemblyOnCurrentDomain;

        return assembly;
    }

    #endregion Private Methods
}

7
7guyo

Linux Users

You may have to install mono if you're trying to generate .exe file from linux system.

See this link on how to install mono on ubuntu 20.04


J
Jess

This is actually much easier than hacking config files. Hacking config files is a little scary; you might miss something! Let the IDE do it for you - hopefully it will do it right!

Right click solution Click Manage Nuget Packages for Solution... Search for System.ComponentModel.Annotations Put a check box in your test projects and click Install

https://i.stack.imgur.com/tht12.png

Now my unit tests run! Awesome!

It is still possible that you will need to use @Guillaume's answer if you have app.config files in your unit test project.