![]() * Fix a case in MethodImpl overriding which wasn't handled as expected in ilc.exe for native aot - This was causing real C# applications to fail to behave correctly on NativeAOT builds - Enable testing for covariant byref returns on nativeaot (split testing up so that the tests do not expect TypeLoadException, which NativeAOT doesn't reliably generate) - Fix implementation of SynthesizedPgoIncompatible project file flag for test script generation - Put copy of attributetesting.il test into the managed type system unit test suite - Add regression test of issue noted in #96175 into managed type system unit test suite - Update workflow documentation to include a better path to finding details on how to run CoreCLR and Libraries tests for Native AOT Fixes #96175 * Fix test with incorrect IL * Make the remaining TODO comments follow existing practice in this file for todo comments * Fix test exclusion for mono llvmaot * Address nits from code review --------- Co-authored-by: David Wrighton <davidwr@microsoft.com> Co-authored-by: Jeff Schwartz <jeffschw@microsoft.com> |
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coding-guidelines | ||
design | ||
infra | ||
issue-mappings | ||
project | ||
tools/illink | ||
workflow | ||
area-owners.md | ||
deep-dive-blog-posts.md | ||
issue-cleanup.md | ||
issues-pr-management.md | ||
README.md |
Documents Index
This repo includes several documents that explain both high-level and low-level concepts about the .NET runtime and libraries. These are very useful for contributors, to get context that can be very difficult to acquire from just reading code.
Intro to .NET
.NET is a self-contained .NET runtime and framework that implements ECMA 335. It can be (and has been) ported to multiple architectures and platforms. It support a variety of installation options, having no specific deployment requirements itself.
Getting Started
Workflow (Building, testing, benchmarking, profiling, etc.)
If you want to contribute a code change to this repo, start here.
Design Docs
- Runtime feature designs under design/features
- Some runtime design can be found at dotnet/designs
The Book of the Runtime is a set of chapters that go in depth into various interesting aspects of the design of the .NET Framework.
For your convenience, here are a few quick links to popular chapters:
For additional information, see this list of blog posts that provide a 'deep-dive' into the CoreCLR source code
Coding Guidelines
- CLR Coding Guide
- CLR JIT Coding Conventions
- Cross Platform Performance and Eventing Design
- Adding New Events to the VM
- C# coding style
- Framework Design Guidelines
- Cross-Platform Guidelines
- Performance Guidelines
- Interop Guidelines
- Breaking Changes
- Breaking Change Definitions
- Breaking Change Rules
- Project Guidelines
- Adding APIs Guidelines
Project Docs
To be added. Visit the project docs folder directly meanwhile.