How to check the version of .NET Core in a deployed app?










1














I am trying to interrogate the version of the .NET Core that my web app was compiled with. The app is deployed on a Raspberry Pi 2 with Linux 4.9.28-v7+ armv7l. Not seeing an obvious way to do it.



Is this even possible?










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  • Not sure if this helps, but might be related: stackoverflow.com/questions/325918/…
    – DMarczak
    Nov 13 '18 at 4:54















1














I am trying to interrogate the version of the .NET Core that my web app was compiled with. The app is deployed on a Raspberry Pi 2 with Linux 4.9.28-v7+ armv7l. Not seeing an obvious way to do it.



Is this even possible?










share|improve this question





















  • Not sure if this helps, but might be related: stackoverflow.com/questions/325918/…
    – DMarczak
    Nov 13 '18 at 4:54













1












1








1







I am trying to interrogate the version of the .NET Core that my web app was compiled with. The app is deployed on a Raspberry Pi 2 with Linux 4.9.28-v7+ armv7l. Not seeing an obvious way to do it.



Is this even possible?










share|improve this question













I am trying to interrogate the version of the .NET Core that my web app was compiled with. The app is deployed on a Raspberry Pi 2 with Linux 4.9.28-v7+ armv7l. Not seeing an obvious way to do it.



Is this even possible?







linux asp.net-core .net-core raspberry-pi raspberry-pi2






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











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share|improve this question










asked Nov 13 '18 at 4:49









AngryHackerAngryHacker

27.3k76236444




27.3k76236444











  • Not sure if this helps, but might be related: stackoverflow.com/questions/325918/…
    – DMarczak
    Nov 13 '18 at 4:54
















  • Not sure if this helps, but might be related: stackoverflow.com/questions/325918/…
    – DMarczak
    Nov 13 '18 at 4:54















Not sure if this helps, but might be related: stackoverflow.com/questions/325918/…
– DMarczak
Nov 13 '18 at 4:54




Not sure if this helps, but might be related: stackoverflow.com/questions/325918/…
– DMarczak
Nov 13 '18 at 4:54












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















1














You can use the following snippet:



var framework = Assembly
.GetEntryAssembly()?
.GetCustomAttribute<TargetFrameworkAttribute>()?
.FrameworkName;

var stats = new

OsPlatform = System.Runtime.InteropServices.RuntimeInformation.OSDescription,
AspDotnetVersion = framework
;


Code found on: weblog.west-wind.com



When run on my pc it returns:



Microsoft Windows 10.0.17134 
.NETCoreApp,Version=v2.1





share|improve this answer




















  • The app is already deployed. I need to interrogate the deployed app - source can't be changed.
    – AngryHacker
    Nov 14 '18 at 18:44










  • If you have access to the dll files you can load on of those assemblies. Instead of calling Assembly.GetEntryAssembly() you call 'Assembly.LoadFile("Path/too/app.dll")'
    – SynerCoder
    Nov 15 '18 at 8:45










  • If you wish to get the .version using http... no way unless you created the app to provide that version inside a http header or something. And that can be done using the code in my answer to get the version, and the on every request set a header with that data.
    – SynerCoder
    Nov 15 '18 at 8:47










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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









1














You can use the following snippet:



var framework = Assembly
.GetEntryAssembly()?
.GetCustomAttribute<TargetFrameworkAttribute>()?
.FrameworkName;

var stats = new

OsPlatform = System.Runtime.InteropServices.RuntimeInformation.OSDescription,
AspDotnetVersion = framework
;


Code found on: weblog.west-wind.com



When run on my pc it returns:



Microsoft Windows 10.0.17134 
.NETCoreApp,Version=v2.1





share|improve this answer




















  • The app is already deployed. I need to interrogate the deployed app - source can't be changed.
    – AngryHacker
    Nov 14 '18 at 18:44










  • If you have access to the dll files you can load on of those assemblies. Instead of calling Assembly.GetEntryAssembly() you call 'Assembly.LoadFile("Path/too/app.dll")'
    – SynerCoder
    Nov 15 '18 at 8:45










  • If you wish to get the .version using http... no way unless you created the app to provide that version inside a http header or something. And that can be done using the code in my answer to get the version, and the on every request set a header with that data.
    – SynerCoder
    Nov 15 '18 at 8:47















1














You can use the following snippet:



var framework = Assembly
.GetEntryAssembly()?
.GetCustomAttribute<TargetFrameworkAttribute>()?
.FrameworkName;

var stats = new

OsPlatform = System.Runtime.InteropServices.RuntimeInformation.OSDescription,
AspDotnetVersion = framework
;


Code found on: weblog.west-wind.com



When run on my pc it returns:



Microsoft Windows 10.0.17134 
.NETCoreApp,Version=v2.1





share|improve this answer




















  • The app is already deployed. I need to interrogate the deployed app - source can't be changed.
    – AngryHacker
    Nov 14 '18 at 18:44










  • If you have access to the dll files you can load on of those assemblies. Instead of calling Assembly.GetEntryAssembly() you call 'Assembly.LoadFile("Path/too/app.dll")'
    – SynerCoder
    Nov 15 '18 at 8:45










  • If you wish to get the .version using http... no way unless you created the app to provide that version inside a http header or something. And that can be done using the code in my answer to get the version, and the on every request set a header with that data.
    – SynerCoder
    Nov 15 '18 at 8:47













1












1








1






You can use the following snippet:



var framework = Assembly
.GetEntryAssembly()?
.GetCustomAttribute<TargetFrameworkAttribute>()?
.FrameworkName;

var stats = new

OsPlatform = System.Runtime.InteropServices.RuntimeInformation.OSDescription,
AspDotnetVersion = framework
;


Code found on: weblog.west-wind.com



When run on my pc it returns:



Microsoft Windows 10.0.17134 
.NETCoreApp,Version=v2.1





share|improve this answer












You can use the following snippet:



var framework = Assembly
.GetEntryAssembly()?
.GetCustomAttribute<TargetFrameworkAttribute>()?
.FrameworkName;

var stats = new

OsPlatform = System.Runtime.InteropServices.RuntimeInformation.OSDescription,
AspDotnetVersion = framework
;


Code found on: weblog.west-wind.com



When run on my pc it returns:



Microsoft Windows 10.0.17134 
.NETCoreApp,Version=v2.1






share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 14 '18 at 12:34









SynerCoderSynerCoder

10.1k43771




10.1k43771











  • The app is already deployed. I need to interrogate the deployed app - source can't be changed.
    – AngryHacker
    Nov 14 '18 at 18:44










  • If you have access to the dll files you can load on of those assemblies. Instead of calling Assembly.GetEntryAssembly() you call 'Assembly.LoadFile("Path/too/app.dll")'
    – SynerCoder
    Nov 15 '18 at 8:45










  • If you wish to get the .version using http... no way unless you created the app to provide that version inside a http header or something. And that can be done using the code in my answer to get the version, and the on every request set a header with that data.
    – SynerCoder
    Nov 15 '18 at 8:47
















  • The app is already deployed. I need to interrogate the deployed app - source can't be changed.
    – AngryHacker
    Nov 14 '18 at 18:44










  • If you have access to the dll files you can load on of those assemblies. Instead of calling Assembly.GetEntryAssembly() you call 'Assembly.LoadFile("Path/too/app.dll")'
    – SynerCoder
    Nov 15 '18 at 8:45










  • If you wish to get the .version using http... no way unless you created the app to provide that version inside a http header or something. And that can be done using the code in my answer to get the version, and the on every request set a header with that data.
    – SynerCoder
    Nov 15 '18 at 8:47















The app is already deployed. I need to interrogate the deployed app - source can't be changed.
– AngryHacker
Nov 14 '18 at 18:44




The app is already deployed. I need to interrogate the deployed app - source can't be changed.
– AngryHacker
Nov 14 '18 at 18:44












If you have access to the dll files you can load on of those assemblies. Instead of calling Assembly.GetEntryAssembly() you call 'Assembly.LoadFile("Path/too/app.dll")'
– SynerCoder
Nov 15 '18 at 8:45




If you have access to the dll files you can load on of those assemblies. Instead of calling Assembly.GetEntryAssembly() you call 'Assembly.LoadFile("Path/too/app.dll")'
– SynerCoder
Nov 15 '18 at 8:45












If you wish to get the .version using http... no way unless you created the app to provide that version inside a http header or something. And that can be done using the code in my answer to get the version, and the on every request set a header with that data.
– SynerCoder
Nov 15 '18 at 8:47




If you wish to get the .version using http... no way unless you created the app to provide that version inside a http header or something. And that can be done using the code in my answer to get the version, and the on every request set a header with that data.
– SynerCoder
Nov 15 '18 at 8:47

















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