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I've got an executable file, and I would like to know which version(s) of the Microsoft .NET Framework this file needs to be started.

Is there an easy way to find this information somewhere?

(So far I tried ILDASM and DUMPBIN without any luck.)

A876
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Sam
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    See also http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3460982/determine-net-framework-version-for-dll?tab=oldest#tab-top – Ruben Bartelink Mar 22 '11 at 09:12
  • https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/downloads/ -- Process Explorer does this very well and easy to use, just run it as admin – AquaAlex Aug 19 '19 at 12:17

11 Answers11

84

Using Notepad, three decades old, 200kb in size, preinstalled tool:

  • open application with notepad appname.exe,
  • search for word framework,
  • repeat last search with F3 until .NET Framework,version=vX.Y shows up
  • if nothing found (versions below 3.0) search for v2. ... still 100 times easier then installing gigabytes of dot net analyzer tools and garbage studios.

update: Thought and Marcus suggested in comments that search term could also be netstandard or netframework

Asain Kujovic
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I think the closest you can reliably get is to determine what version of the CLR is required. You can do this by using ILDASM and looking at the "MANIFEST" node or Reflector and looking at the dissasembly view of the "Application.exe" node as IL. In both cases there is a comment that indicates the CLR version. In ILDASM, the comment is "// Metadata version" and in Reflector the comment is "Target Runtime Version".

Here are examples for a .NET WinForms application named WindowsFormsApplication1.exe:

ILDASM:

// Metadata version: v2.0.50727
.assembly extern mscorlib
{
  .publickeytoken = (B7 7A 5C 56 19 34 E0 89 )                         // .z\V.4..
  .ver 2:0:0:0
}
.assembly extern System
{
  .publickeytoken = (B7 7A 5C 56 19 34 E0 89 )                         // .z\V.4..
  .ver 2:0:0:0
}

Reflector:

.module WindowsFormsApplication1.exe
.subsystem 0x0002
// MVID: {CA3D2090-16C5-4899-953E-4736D6BC0FA8}
// Target Runtime Version: v2.0.50727

You can also look at the list of referenced assemblies and look for the reference with the highest version number.

Again, using ILDASM looking at the "MANIFEST" node data:

.assembly extern System.Drawing
{
  .publickeytoken = (B0 3F 5F 7F 11 D5 0A 3A )                         // .?_....:
  .ver 2:0:0:0
}
.assembly extern System.Core
{
  .publickeytoken = (B7 7A 5C 56 19 34 E0 89 )                         // .z\V.4..
  .ver 3:5:0:0
}

And using Reflector, looking at the dissambly (still as IL) for each reference listed:

.assembly extern System.Core
{
    .ver 3:5:0:0
    .publickeytoken = (B7 7A 5C 56 19 34 E0 89)
}

By finding the reference with the highest version metadata you can determine what version of the Framework that reference came from, which would indicate that you need the same version of the Framework installed for the application to run. That being said, I wouldn't treat this as 100% reliable, but I don't think it will change any time soon.

Scott Dorman
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    Unfortunately Microsoft introduces a breaking change for the above technique. .NET 4.5 assemblies cannot run on raw .NET 4, and to tell a .NET 4.5 assembly you need to also read System.Runtime.Versioning.TargetFrameworkAttribute. http://www.lextm.com/2013/02/how-to-tell-net-45-only-assemblies.html – Lex Li Apr 14 '13 at 03:34
  • @LexLi link does not work – Zoli Jun 13 '23 at 14:46
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    @Zoli https://halfblood.pro/how-to-tell-net-4-5-only-assemblies-f5e9041533bb – Lex Li Jun 13 '23 at 15:20
36

A more simplified approach would be to use dotPeek and see what shows up in the tree.

See the properties panel: enter image description here

Daniel A. White
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27

You can now use ILSpy to examine the target framework of an assembly. After loading the assembly, click on the root of the assembly node, and you can find the information under the TargetFramework declaration:

[assembly: TargetFramework(".NETFramework,Version=v4.5", FrameworkDisplayName = ".NET Framework 4.5")]
tsandhol
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    Note that [TargetFrameworkAttribute](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.runtime.versioning.targetframeworkattribute) was only added in .NET 4.0, so will not be present on assemblies compiled against .NET 3.5 or earlier. – Wai Ha Lee Sep 28 '18 at 09:54
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    ILSpy shows "Runtime: vXXX" in comments when clicking the loaded assembly root node. I was able to see a v1.1.4322 framework project. – ryancdotnet Dec 01 '18 at 07:12
  • It shows me: `// Architecture: x64 // Runtime: .NET 4.0 ` – Zoli Jun 13 '23 at 10:59
17

From the command line: find "Framework" MyApp.exe

Sean B
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15

From code you can use Assembly.ImageRuntimeVersion but by looking at the file probably the best thing to do would be to use reflector and see which version of mscorlib is being referenced.

Edit: Even better would be to use ildasm, open your assembly and then view the manifest for the assembly. The first line of the manifest will tell you the exact version of CLR that the assembly was built for.

Andrew Hare
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    This is wrong. The OP asked about the version of .NET Framework, not the version of the CLR Runtime. This answer address the latter. As an example, I am running against Framework 4.7.2531.0 which uses the CLR Runtime version 4.0.30139. ImageRuntimeVersion returns the CLR version, not the Framework version. – Tom Baxter Aug 24 '17 at 14:12
12

You can use a tool called CorFlags.exe. It has been around since .NET 2.0, and I know for sure that it is included in the Windows SDK 7.0. By default (on Windows XP Pro) it is installed to C:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.0A\bin\CorFlags.exe. Provide it with the file path to a managed module (without any other command-line flags) to display its header information, which includes the version.

Keep in mind that this utility is designed to modify the PE32 header of a module, so don't use any of the flags until you read the documentation carefully.

Vince Fedorchak
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6

You can obtain the .NET version of a file in Windows using Powershell. The following script;

$path=’.\’
$ErrorActionPreference = "SilentlyContinue"
$files=Get-ChildItem -Path $path -Recurse -include *.dll,*.exe
foreach($file in $files)
{
    $filename = $file.BaseName
    $version = $([System.Reflection.Assembly]::ReflectionOnlyLoadFrom($file.FullName).GetCustomAttributesData() |
                 select-object -ExpandProperty ConstructorArguments | 
                 select-object -ExpandProperty Value | 
                 select-string -Pattern '.NET')
    Write-Output "$filename,$version"
}

provides the following result; enter image description here

Note that the result extracted the .NET version for the exe files in that folder, but it will also do the same for a dll.

Mark Walker
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    This didn't work for me. I copied and pasted everything into powershell with my path altered to the exe path and it just tells me the name of the application, nothing else – edo101 Jan 29 '21 at 16:18
  • Nicely done; to make it work in PowerShell _Core_, replace `ReflectionOnlyLoadFrom` with `LoadFile` – mklement0 Sep 02 '22 at 21:37
  • Same for me, says nothing about my Winforms exe, only the filename printed – Zoli Jun 13 '23 at 10:57
2

Or you can just find out which reference of System.Core it has. That will tell you the .NET Framework version this app is using. For 2.0 the version of System.Core will be 2.0.xxx.xxx. For 3.5 the version will be 3.5.xxx.xxx, etc.

Denis
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2

On Linux/OSX/unix you can use:

strings that_app.exe | grep 'v2.\|Framework'
Pierz
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0

For newer .NET 6.0 applications the notepad method did not work for me, but if there is a *.deps.json file next to the exes that's a big clue - often contains the version in form of the following section

"runtimeTarget": {
    "name": ".NETCoreApp,Version=v6.0/win-x86"

Edit: following up, you can also look for a pair of .exe and .dll files with the same name, try opening the DLL file in notepad and search for NETCoreApp, you should find something like this:

.NETCoreApp,Version=v6.0