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When you create a NuGet package from your code, you package that functionality into a component that can be shared with and used by any number of other developers. This article describes how to create a package using MSBuild. MSBuild comes preinstalled with every Visual Studio workload that contains NuGet. Additionally you can also use MSBuild through the dotnet CLI with dotnet msbuild.
For .NET Core and .NET Standard projects that use the SDK-style format, and any other SDK-style projects, NuGet uses information in the project file directly to create a package. For a non-SDK-style project that uses <PackageReference>, NuGet also uses the project file to create a package.
SDK-style projects have the pack functionality available by default. For non-SDK-style PackageReference projects, it is also available by default starting from Visual Studio 2026. In earlier versions of Visual Studio you need to add the NuGet.Build.Tasks.Pack package to the project dependencies and we recommend removing this package reference when upgrading to Visual Studio 2026. For detailed information about MSBuild pack targets, see NuGet pack and restore as MSBuild targets.
For SDK-style projects, msbuild -t:pack is functionally equivalent to dotnet pack.
Important
This topic applies to SDK-style projects, typically .NET Core and .NET Standard projects, and to non-SDK-style projects that use PackageReference.
Set properties
The following properties are required to create a package.
PackageId, the package identifier, which must be unique across the gallery that hosts the package. If not specified, the default value isAssemblyName.Version, a specific version number in the form Major.Minor.Patch[-Suffix] where -Suffix identifies pre-release versions. If not specified, the default value is 1.0.0.- The package title as it should appear on the host (like nuget.org)
Authors, author and owner information. If not specified, the default value isAssemblyName.Company, your company name. If not specified, the default value isAssemblyName.
Additionally if you are packing non-SDK-style projects that use PackageReference, the following is required:
PackageOutputPath, the output folder for the package generated when calling pack.
In Visual Studio, you can set these values in the project properties (right-click the project in Solution Explorer, choose Properties, and select the Package tab). You can also set these properties directly in the project files (.csproj).
<PropertyGroup>
<PackageId>ClassLibDotNetStandard</PackageId>
<Version>1.0.0</Version>
<Authors>your_name</Authors>
<Company>your_company</Company>
</PropertyGroup>
Important
Give the package an identifier that's unique across nuget.org or whatever package source you're using.
The following example shows a simple, complete project file with these properties included.
<Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk">
<PropertyGroup>
<TargetFramework>netstandard2.0</TargetFramework>
<PackageId>ClassLibDotNetStandard</PackageId>
<Version>1.0.0</Version>
<Authors>your_name</Authors>
<Company>your_company</Company>
</PropertyGroup>
</Project>
You can also set the optional properties, such as Title, PackageDescription, and PackageTags, as described in MSBuild pack targets, Controlling dependency assets, and NuGet metadata properties.
Note
For packages built for public consumption, pay special attention to the PackageTags property, as tags help others find your package and understand what it does.
For details on declaring dependencies and specifying version numbers, see Package references in project files and Package versioning. It is also possible to surface assets from dependencies directly in the package by using the <IncludeAssets> and <ExcludeAssets> attributes. For more information, seee Controlling dependency assets.
Add an optional description field
The package's optional description appears on the README tab of the package's nuget.org page. The description pulls from the <Description> in the project file or the $description in the .nuspec file.
The following example shows a Description in the .csproj file for a .NET package:
<Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk">
<PropertyGroup>
<PackageId>Azure.Storage.Blobs</PackageId>
<Version>12.4.0</Version>
<PackageTags>Microsoft Azure Storage Blobs;Microsoft;Azure;Blobs;Blob;Storage;StorageScalable</PackageTags>
<Description>
This client library enables working with the Microsoft Azure Storage Blob service for storing binary and text data.
For this release see notes - https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-net/blob/master/sdk/storage/Azure.Storage.Blobs/README.md and https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-net/blob/master/sdk/storage/Azure.Storage.Blobs/CHANGELOG.md
in addition to the breaking changes https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-net/blob/master/sdk/storage/Azure.Storage.Blobs/BreakingChanges.txt
Microsoft Azure Storage quickstarts and tutorials - https://free.blessedness.top/azure/storage/
Microsoft Azure Storage REST API Reference - https://free.blessedness.top/rest/api/storageservices/
REST API Reference for Blob Service - https://free.blessedness.top/rest/api/storageservices/blob-service-rest-api
</Description>
</PropertyGroup>
</Project>
Choose a unique package identifier and set the version number
The package identifier and the version number uniquely identify the exact code that's contained in the package.
Follow these best practices to create the package identifier:
The identifier must be unique across nuget.org and all other locations that host the package. To avoid conflicts, a good pattern is to use your company name as the first part of the identifier.
Follow a .NET namespace-like naming convention, using dot notation. For example, use
Contoso.Utility.UsefulStuffrather thanContoso-Utility-UsefulStufforContoso_Utility_UsefulStuff. It's also helpful for consumers if you match the package identifier to the namespace the code uses.If you produce a package of sample code that demonstrates how to use another package, append
.Sampleto the identifier, as inContoso.Utility.UsefulStuff.Sample.The sample package has a dependency on the original package. When you create the sample package, add
<IncludeAssets>with thecontentFilesvalue. In the content folder, arrange the sample code in a folder called \Samples\<identifier>, such as \Samples\Contoso.Utility.UsefulStuff.Sample.
Follow these best practices to set the package version:
In general, set the package version to match the project or assembly version, although this isn't strictly required. Matching the version is simple when you limit a package to a single assembly. NuGet itself deals with package versions when resolving dependencies, not assembly versions.
If you use a non-standard version scheme, be sure to consider the NuGet versioning rules as explained in Package versioning. NuGet is mostly Semantic Versioning 2.0.0-compliant.
Note
For more information about dependency resolution, see Dependency resolution with PackageReference. For information that might help you understand versioning, see this series of blog posts:
Configure project for pack
SDK-style projects do not require any additional configuration.
Non-SDK-style projects either need at least one package installed (via PackageReference, not packages.config), or the project explicitly needs to instruct NuGet to treat the project as a PackageReference project via the RestoreProjectStyle property.
Visual Studio 2022 and earlier does not have pack built-in, so you also need to install the NuGet.Build.Tasks.Pack package. When upgrading to Visual Studio 2026 or later, we recommend uninstalling the package, so that you benefit from new features and bug fixes.
Edit the project file.
If you want to explicitly instruct NuGet to treat the project as PackageReference (the project does not have any packages installed), find or add a
<PropertyGroup>that does not have anyConditionstatement, and add:<PropertyGroup> <!-- other properties --> <RestoreProjectStyle>PackageReference</RestoreProjectStyle> <!-- more properties are allowed --> </PropertyGroup>If you are using Visual Studio 2022 or earlier, add the following after the
<PropertyGroup>element:<ItemGroup> <!-- ... --> <PackageReference Include="NuGet.Build.Tasks.Pack" Version="6.14.0" PrivateAssets="all" /> <!-- ... --> </ItemGroup>Open a Developer command prompt (In the Search box, type Developer command prompt).
You typically want to start the Developer Command Prompt for Visual Studio from the Start menu, as it will be configured with all the necessary paths for MSBuild.
Switch to the folder containing the project file and type the following command to restore the NuGet.Build.Tasks.Pack package.
# Uses the project file in the current folder by default msbuild -t:restoreMake sure that the MSBuild output indicates that the build completed successfully.
Run the msbuild -t:pack command
To build a NuGet package (a .nupkg file) from the project, run the msbuild -t:pack command, which also builds the project automatically:
In the Developer command prompt for Visual Studio, type the following command:
# Uses the project file in the current folder by default
msbuild -t:pack
The output shows the path to the .nupkg file.
Microsoft (R) Build Engine version 16.1.76+g14b0a930a7 for .NET Framework
Copyright (C) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Build started 8/5/2019 3:09:15 PM.
Project "C:\Users\username\source\repos\ClassLib_DotNetStandard\ClassLib_DotNetStandard.csproj" on node 1 (pack target(s)).
GenerateTargetFrameworkMonikerAttribute:
Skipping target "GenerateTargetFrameworkMonikerAttribute" because all output files are up-to-date with respect to the input files.
CoreCompile:
...
CopyFilesToOutputDirectory:
Copying file from "C:\Users\username\source\repos\ClassLib_DotNetStandard\obj\Debug\netstandard2.0\ClassLib_DotNetStandard.dll" to "C:\Use
rs\username\source\repos\ClassLib_DotNetStandard\bin\Debug\netstandard2.0\ClassLib_DotNetStandard.dll".
ClassLib_DotNetStandard -> C:\Users\username\source\repos\ClassLib_DotNetStandard\bin\Debug\netstandard2.0\ClassLib_DotNetStandard.dll
Copying file from "C:\Users\username\source\repos\ClassLib_DotNetStandard\obj\Debug\netstandard2.0\ClassLib_DotNetStandard.pdb" to "C:\Use
rs\username\source\repos\ClassLib_DotNetStandard\bin\Debug\netstandard2.0\ClassLib_DotNetStandard.pdb".
GenerateNuspec:
Successfully created package 'C:\Users\username\source\repos\ClassLib_DotNetStandard\bin\Debug\AppLogger.1.0.0.nupkg'.
Done Building Project "C:\Users\username\source\repos\ClassLib_DotNetStandard\ClassLib_DotNetStandard.csproj" (pack target(s)).
Build succeeded.
0 Warning(s)
0 Error(s)
Time Elapsed 00:00:01.21
Automatically generate package on build
To automatically run msbuild -t:pack when you build or restore the project, add the following line to your project file within <PropertyGroup>:
<GeneratePackageOnBuild>true</GeneratePackageOnBuild>
When you run msbuild -t:pack on a solution, this packs all the projects in the solution that are packable (<IsPackable> property is set to true).
Note
When you automatically generate the package, the time to pack increases the build time for your project.
Test package installation
Before publishing a package, you typically want to test the process of installing a package into a project. The tests make sure that the necessarily files all end up in their correct places in the project.
You can test installations manually in Visual Studio or on the command line using the normal package installation steps.
Important
Packages are immutable. If you correct a problem, change the contents of the package and pack again, when you retest you will still be using the old version of the package until you clear your global packages folder. This is especially relevant when testing packages that don't use a unique prerelease label on every build.
Next Steps
Once you've created a package, which is a .nupkg file, you can publish it to the gallery of your choice as described on Publishing a Package.
You might also want to extend the capabilities of your package or otherwise support other scenarios as described in the following topics:
- NuGet pack and restore as MSBuild targets
- Package versioning
- Support multiple target frameworks
- Transformations of source and configuration files
- Localization
- Pre-release versions
- Set package type
- MSBuild props and targets
- Create packages with COM interop assemblies
Finally, there are additional package types to be aware of: