Agent skill

build-parallelism

Guide for optimizing MSBuild build parallelism and multi-project scheduling. Only activate in MSBuild/.NET build context. USE FOR: builds not utilizing all CPU cores, speeding up multi-project solutions, evaluating graph build mode (/graph), build time not improving with -m flag, understanding project dependency topology. Note: /maxcpucount default is 1 (sequential) — always use -m for parallel builds. Covers /maxcpucount, graph build for better scheduling and isolation, BuildInParallel on MSBuild task, reducing unnecessary ProjectReferences, solution filters (.slnf) for building subsets. DO NOT USE FOR: single-project builds, incremental build issues (use incremental-build), compilation slowness within a project (use build-perf-diagnostics), non-MSBuild build systems. INVOKES: dotnet build -m, dotnet build /graph, binlog analysis.

Stars 302
Forks 22

Install this agent skill to your Project

npx add-skill https://github.com/managedcode/dotnet-skills/tree/main/catalog/Tools/Official-DotNet-MSBuild/skills/build-parallelism

SKILL.md

MSBuild Parallelism Model

  • /maxcpucount (or -m): number of worker nodes (processes)
  • Default: 1 node (sequential!). Always use -m for parallel builds
  • Recommended: -m without a number = use all logical processors
  • Each node builds one project at a time
  • Projects are scheduled based on dependency graph

Project Dependency Graph

  • MSBuild builds projects in dependency order (topological sort)
  • Critical path: longest chain of dependent projects determines minimum build time
  • Bottleneck: if project A depends on B, C, D and B takes 60s while C and D take 5s, B is the bottleneck
  • Diagnosis: replay binlog to diagnostic log with performancesummary and check Project Performance Summary — shows per-project time; grep for node.*assigned to check scheduling
  • Wide graphs (many independent projects) parallelize well; deep graphs (long chains) don't

Graph Build Mode (/graph)

  • dotnet build /graph or msbuild /graph
  • What it changes: MSBuild constructs the full project dependency graph BEFORE building
  • Benefits: better scheduling, avoids redundant evaluations, enables isolated builds
  • Limitations: all projects must use <ProjectReference> (no programmatic MSBuild task references)
  • When to use: large solutions with many projects, CI builds
  • When NOT to use: projects that dynamically discover references at build time

Optimizing Project References

  • Reduce unnecessary <ProjectReference> — each adds to the dependency chain
  • Use <ProjectReference ... SkipGetTargetFrameworkProperties="true"> to avoid extra evaluations
  • <ProjectReference ... ReferenceOutputAssembly="false"> for build-order-only dependencies
  • Consider if a ProjectReference should be a PackageReference instead (pre-built NuGet)
  • Use solution filters (.slnf) to build subsets of the solution

BuildInParallel

  • <MSBuild Projects="@(ProjectsToBuild)" BuildInParallel="true" /> in custom targets
  • Without BuildInParallel="true", MSBuild task batches projects sequentially
  • Ensure /maxcpucount > 1 for this to have effect

Multi-threaded MSBuild Tasks

  • Individual tasks can run multi-threaded within a single project build
  • Tasks implementing IMultiThreadableTask can run on multiple threads
  • Tasks must declare thread-safety via [MSBuildMultiThreadableTask]

Analyzing Parallelism with Binlog

Step-by-step:

  1. Replay the binlog: dotnet msbuild build.binlog -noconlog -fl -flp:v=diag;logfile=full.log;performancesummary
  2. Check Project Performance Summary at the end of full.log
  3. Ideal: build time should be much less than sum of project times (parallelism)
  4. If build time ≈ sum of project times: too many serial dependencies, or one slow project blocking others
  5. grep 'Target Performance Summary' -A 30 full.log → find the bottleneck targets
  6. Consider splitting large projects or optimizing the critical path

CI/CD Parallelism Tips

  • Use -m in CI (many CI runners have multiple cores)
  • Consider splitting solution into build stages for extreme parallelism
  • Use build caching (NuGet lock files, deterministic builds) to avoid rebuilding unchanged projects
  • dotnet build /graph works well with structured CI pipelines

Expand your agent's capabilities with these related and highly-rated skills.

managedcode/dotnet-skills

dotnet-project-setup

Create or reorganize .NET solutions with clean project boundaries, repeatable SDK settings, and a maintainable baseline for libraries, apps, tests, CI, and local development.

302 22
Explore
managedcode/dotnet-skills

csharp-scripts

Run single-file C# programs as scripts (file-based apps) for quick experimentation, prototyping, and concept testing. Use when the user wants to write and execute a small C# program without creating a full project.

302 22
Explore
managedcode/dotnet-skills

dotnet-pinvoke

Correctly call native (C/C++) libraries from .NET using P/Invoke and LibraryImport. Covers function signatures, string marshalling, memory lifetime, SafeHandle, and cross-platform patterns. USE FOR: writing new P/Invoke or LibraryImport declarations, reviewing or debugging existing native interop code, wrapping a C or C++ library for use in .NET, diagnosing crashes, memory leaks, or corruption at the managed/native boundary. DO NOT USE FOR: COM interop, C++/CLI mixed-mode assemblies, or pure managed code with no native dependencies.

302 22
Explore
managedcode/dotnet-skills

nuget-trusted-publishing

Set up NuGet trusted publishing (OIDC) on a GitHub Actions repo — replaces long-lived API keys with short-lived tokens. USE FOR: trusted publishing, NuGet OIDC, keyless NuGet publish, migrate from NuGet API key, NuGet/login, secure NuGet publishing. DO NOT USE FOR: publishing to private feeds or Azure Artifacts (OIDC is nuget.org only). INVOKES: shell (powershell or bash), edit, create, ask_user for guided repo setup.

302 22
Explore
managedcode/dotnet-skills

dotnet-legacy-aspnet

Maintain classic ASP.NET applications on .NET Framework, including Web Forms, older MVC, and legacy hosting patterns, while planning realistic modernization boundaries.

302 22
Explore
managedcode/dotnet-skills

dotnet-code-review

Review .NET changes for bugs, regressions, architectural drift, missing tests, incorrect async or disposal behavior, and platform-specific pitfalls before you approve or merge them.

302 22
Explore

Didn't find tool you were looking for?

Be as detailed as possible for better results