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Concepts of Isolated Applications and Side-by-side Assemblies

An application is considered an isolated application if all of its components are side-by-side assemblies. A side-by-side assembly is a collection of resources—a group of DLLs, windows classes, COM servers, type libraries, or interfaces— that are deployed together and made available for an application to use at run time. Typically, a side-by-side assembly contains one to several DLLs.

Shared or private

A side-by-side assembly can be either shared or private. Shared side-by-side assemblies may be used by multiple applications that specify, in their manifests, a dependence on the assembly. Multiple versions of a side-by-side assembly can be shared by different applications that are running at the same time. A private assembly is an assembly that is deployed together with an application for the exclusive use of that application. Private assemblies are installed in the folder that contains the application's executable file or in one of its subfolders.

Manifests and search order

Both isolated applications and side-by-side assemblies are described by manifests. A manifest is an XML document that can be an external file or can be embedded in an application or an assembly as a resource. The manifest file of an isolated application is used to manage the names and versions of shared side-by-side assemblies to which the application should bind at run time. The manifest of a side-by-side assembly specifies names, versions, resources, and dependent assemblies of side-by-side assemblies. The manifest for a shared side-by-side assembly is installed in the %WINDIR%\WinSxS\Manifests\ folder. For a private assembly, we recommend that you include its manifest in the DLL as a resource that has an ID equal to 1. You can also give the private assembly the same name as that of the DLL. For more information, see Private Assemblies.

At execution time, Windows uses assembly information from the application manifest to search and load the corresponding side-by-side assembly. If an isolated application specifies an assembly dependency, the operating system first searches for the assembly among the shared assemblies in the native assembly cache in the %WINDIR%\WinSxS\ folder. If the required assembly is not found, the operating system then searches for a private assembly in a folder of the application's directory structure. For more information, see Assembly Searching Sequence.

Changing dependencies

You can change side-by-side assembly dependencies after an application has been deployed by modifying the Publisher Configuration Files and Application Configuration Files. A publisher configuration file, also known as a publisher policy file, is an XML file that globally redirects applications and assemblies to use one version of a side-by-side assembly instead of another version of the same assembly. For example, you could change a dependency when a bug fix or security fix is deployed for a side-by-side assembly and you want to redirect all applications to use the fixed version. An application configuration file is an XML file that redirects a specific application to use one version of a side-by-side assembly instead of another version of the same assembly. You can use an application configuration file to redirect a particular application to use a version of a side-by-side assembly that’s different from the one that’s defined in the publisher configuration file. For more information, see Configuration.

Visual C++ libraries

In Visual Studio 2005 and Visual Studio 2008, redistributable libraries such as ATL, MFC, CRT, Standard C++, OpenMP, and MSDIA are deployed as shared side-by-side assemblies to the native assembly cache. In Visual Studio 2010, the redistributable libraries use central deployment. By default, all applications that are built by using Visual C++ are built with the manifest embedded in the final binary, and the manifest describes the dependencies of the binary on the Visual C++ libraries. To learn more about manifest generation for Visual C++ applications, see Understanding Manifest Generation for C/C++ Programs. A manifest is not required for applications that are statically linked to the libraries that they use, or that use local deployment. For more information about deployment, see Deployment in Visual C++ 2010.

See Also

Other Resources

Building C/C++ Isolated Applications and Side-by-side Assemblies