NET assembly unload conundrum
Afficher commentaires plus anciens
I am trying to develop a C# class in Visual Studio and test it in Matlab. I can load the NET assembly and use it okay, but a problem arises if I change the NET code.
If I load the NET assembly into Matlab from the Visual Studio debug folder I can't rebuild the assembly in Visual Studio.
If I copy the dll into a local folder and load into Matlab from there I can only load once. Subsequent times I get the following error: "The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process." In other words it won't let me copy the new dll because the old one is still in use.
So at the moment if I change the assembly code I have to close Matlab and reopen it to test the new assembly. This is adding quite a lot of time to my development.
I believe my version of Matlab (2010a) cannot unload NET assemblies. Does anyone know of another way around this?
Réponse acceptée
Plus de réponses (5)
Cameron
le 2 Fév 2016
0 votes
I am also having this same problem with R2015b. Any resolution??
Ivan
le 19 Juil 2016
0 votes
The same problem in R2016a
imme werus
le 24 Avr 2017
Modifié(e) : imme werus
le 24 Avr 2017
0 votes
I think it is also the same for 2016b, is that true ?
Markus Finkeldey
le 10 Oct 2017
Modifié(e) : Markus Finkeldey
le 10 Oct 2017
0 votes
It seems that the .NET support of Matlab is very limited even in R2017a, makes it a hell of a workload if you want to access a c# library instead of a pure c library.
1 commentaire
Paul Kelly
le 10 Oct 2017
Travis Leith
le 30 Oct 2019
0 votes
This is still an issue going into 2020 :(
3 commentaires
Paul Kelly
le 30 Oct 2019
Roofus Milton
le 15 Nov 2019
Yup. Wolfram has great integration. I suspect their approach creates a new AppDomain and subsequently loads the requested assemblies. LINQPad has remained my default testing tool.
Carlo
le 16 Fév 2024
Still a problem in matlab 23!
Catégories
En savoir plus sur MATLAB Compiler SDK dans Centre d'aide et File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!