Defined in Multiple Assemblies

The predefined type ‘System.Func’ is defined in multiple assemblies in the global alias … mscorlib.dll and System.Core.dll. SOLVED!

Today I migrated a C#/WPF project in Visual Studio 2010 from .NET 3.5 SP1 to .NET 4.0. Immediately the compile failed issuing this set of errors:

  • The predefined type ‘System.Func’ is defined in multiple assemblies in the global alias; using definition from ‘c:\Program Files (x86)\Reference Assemblies\Microsoft\Framework\.NETFramework\v4.0\mscorlib.dll’
  • The predefined type ‘System.Func’ is defined in multiple assemblies in the global alias; using definition from ‘c:\Program Files (x86)\Reference Assemblies\Microsoft\Framework\.NETFramework\v4.0\System.Core.dll’

To resolve this error involved understanding a little bit more about C#, .NET, and the Common Language Runtime (CLR).

According to C# 4.0 In A Nutshell from O’Reilly Press, on page 181 it says:

Some of the .NET types are used directly by the CLR and are essential for the managed hosting environment. These types reside in an assembly called mscorlib.dll and include C#’s built in types, ….

At a level above this are additional types that “flesh out” the CLR-functionality, …. These reside in System.dll, System.Xml.dll, and System.Core.dll, and together with mscorlib the provide a rich programming environment….

So mscorlib and System.Core are both needed. This begs the question, why is Func declared in both and thus causing a conflict? Or is it?

Further on in C# 4.0 In A Nutshell from O’Reilly Press, on page 183 in a general note it says:

A notable exception is the following types, which Framework 4.0 have moved from System.Core to mscorlib.dll:

  • The Action and Func delegates

This suggests a case exists where mscorlib is from our current .NET (the later one has Func), and System.Core is coming from the old one (which is where Func lives for that version).

How is this possible? It’s our projects fault.

This question on StackOverflow provides some insight; check out Simon‘s answer.

  1. Right-click the project and select Unload Project
  2. Right-click the project again and select Edit Project
  3. Scroll down in the XML to find the ItemGroup element; it’ll have Reference elements insider of it.
  4. Locate the Reference element that has Include=”System.Core” as an attribute.
  5. If it has other qualifiers, remove them. If it has a TargetFrameworkVersion subelement remove it.
  6. Save the XML.
  7. Right-click the project and reload it; try a build now.

In my case, I had an entry that looked like this:

<ItemGroup>
  <Reference Include=”System.Core”>
    <TargetFrameworkVersion>3.5</TargetFrameworkVersion>
  </Reference>
</ItemGroup>

Removing the TargetFrameworkVersion, shown in red above, un-pinned the dll from the older .NET framework and things worked just fine.

Firefox Slow Page Load – Solved

Firefox 3 slow? 20 second page load times? Figured out why. And how to fix it.

A co-worker showed me an interesting problem with Firefox today. He loaded a page from our application (running on localhost) and the page content loaded instantly, but the page load itself didn’t end until a time out 20 seconds later. Literally.

Everything we saw a measured from the browser or from the sending application showed that the content was sent in milliseconds, and the page load was just sitting there doing nothing. We were even using the latest Firefox beta.

Other browsers had no such problem.

Turns out, we figured out what was going on using the Tamper Data add-on.

Turns out there was a Connection: keep-alive in the header. When we changed it from keep-alive to close, the browser behaved as expected. That is, it loaded the page instantly.

A little web investigation showed that when you use the keep-alive attribute, you must also use Content-Length: header, which the sending application wasn’t doing.

A quick application tweak to send the content length, and everything ran super spiffy.

Now, if you don’t have access to the application that’s sending you web pages, you can twiddle with the about:config and change the network.http.keep-alive setting to false.