I’ve been having a bit of fun setting up a Nuget Server as of late, and learning the nuances of versioning a .NET Standard library. With that in mind, I thought I would document my approach to how I got things going and all the pitfalls and dead ends I ended up running into. This series will read a bit less like a stock standard tutorial and more about a brain dump of what I’ve learnt over the past few days. I should also note that in some cases, we aren’t able to go all out .NET Core mode. For example the official Nuget Server web application is full framework only – not a whole lot we can do about that.

The series will be broken into three parts. The server setup and the different options you have for actually hosting your nuget feed, different ways you can go about structuring your project and code for ease of use when packaging into a nuget feed, and how to go about actually building your package and pushing it to your server.

Part 1 : Intro & Server Setup

Part 2 : Developing Nuget Packages

Part 3 : Building & Pushing Packages To Your Nuget Feed

Why?

The first question you may ask is why? Why have a private nuget server? It may seem like a bit overkill but there are two scenarios where a private nuget feed will come in handy.

If you or your company work on multiple projects and end up copying and pasting the same boilerplate code into every project. That’s a good reason to setup a nuget server. The actual impetuous for me to go ahead and set one up was having to copy in our custom “logging” code for the *nth* time into a project. This is pretty common in services companies where projects last 3-6 months before moving onto the next client. The second reason is similar, but it’s more around your architecture. If you have an architecture focused on microservices either by way of API’s or ESBs, then it’s likely that you are working on lots of smaller standalone projects. These projects will likely share similar code bases for logging, data access etc. Being able to plug in a custom nuget feed and grab the latest version of this shared code is a huge time saver and avoids costly mistakes.

Hosted Services

There are a number of services that will host your nuget feed for you. These usually have the bonus of added security, a nice GUI to manage things, and the added benefit of a bit of support when things go wrong. Obviously the downsides are that they aren’t free, and it also means that your packages are off-premises which could be a deal breaker for some folks.

An important thing to note is that almost all hosted solutions I looked at offered other package manager types included in your subscription. So for example hosted NPM feeds if you also want to publish NPM packages. This is something else to keep in mind if you are looking to go down this route.

I looked into two different services.

MyGet

MyGet seems to be the consensus best hosted solution out there if you are looking for something outside the Microsoft eco-system. Pricing seemed extremely cheap with only limited contributors but unlimited “readers” – let me know if I got that wrong because I re-read the FAQ over and over trying to understand it. They do offer things like ADFS integration for enterprise customers, but that’s when things start to get a tad expensive.

I had a quick play around with MyGet but nothing too indepth and honestly it seemed pretty solid. There wasn’t any major feature that I was wow’d by, but then again I was only publishing a few packages there trying things out, nothing too massive.

Something that was interesting to me was that MyGet will actually build your nuget packages for you, all you need to do is give it access to your source control.

This seems like a pretty helpful service at first, but then again, they aren’t going to be running your pipeline with unit tests and the like, so maybe not too useful. But it’s pretty nifty none the less.

Visual Studio Team Services

Microsoft VSTS also offer a hosted package manager solution (Get started here). I think as with most things in the VSTS/TFS world, it only makes sense if you are already in that eco-system or looking to dive in.

The pricing for VSTS works in two ways. It’s free for the first 5 users and every user from there costs approx $4 each. Users count as readers too so you can’t even consume a nuget package without a license (Which is pretty annoying). OR If a user has an “Enterprise” license (Basically an MSDN Subscription which most companies in the Microsoft eco-system already have), then they can use the VSTS package manager for free. As I say, this really only makes sense if you are already using VSTS already.

Now obviously when you use VSTS Package Manager, it’s also integrated into builds so it’s super easy to push new packages to the feed with a handy little drop down showing feeds already in VSTS Package Manager. I mean it’s not rocket science but it was kinda nice none the less.

The GUI for managing packages is also really slick with the ability to search, promote and unlist packages all from within VSTS.

Official Nuget Server

The alternative to using a hosted solution is to have an on-premises private nuget feed (Or possibly on a VM). There are actually a few different open source versions out there, but for now I’ll focus on the official nuget server package from Microsoft. You can check out instructions to get it up and running here.

Now this was actually my preferred option at first. To keep control of the packages and have complete control of the hosting seemed like the best option. But that quickly changes for a few reasons…

Firstly, there is zero privacy/authorization on consuming packages from the nuget server. This means you either have to run with an IP whitelist (Which IMO is a huge pain in the ass), host locally, or just pray that no one finds the URL/IP of your server. This seemed like a pretty big deal breaker.

There is an API Key authorization that you can set in the web.config, but this only restricts publishing packages, not consuming them. This in itself seemed like an annoyance because it meant that the keys to the kingdom was an API Key and with that you could essentially do what you liked with it. Because there are no “promoting” of packages in the feed (Everything published is automatically the latest version in the feed), this seemed like it could lead to trouble.

The packages themselves are actually stored on the server disk with no ability to offload them to something like Blob/S3. This seemed alright at first (Disk space is pretty cheap), but it also means you can’t use a hosted solution like Azure Websites because when deploying to these, it blows away the entire previous running instance – with your packages getting the treatment at the same time. This means you had to use actual hardware like a VM or host it locally on a machine.

So the obvious thought was, let’s just host it locally in the office in a closet. This gives us complete control and means no one from the outside can access it. But, what if we do want someone from the outside world to access it? Like if someone is working from home? Well then we could setup a VPN and th…. you know what. Forget it. Let’s use VSTS.

Not to mention there is no GUI to speak of :

There is a package called “Nuget Gallery” that seems to add a facelift to everything, but by this point it was a lost cause.

Summary

In the end I went with VSTS. Mostly because the company I am working with already has VSTS built into their eco-system for both builds and source control, it just made sense. If they didn’t, I would have certainly gone with MyGet over trying to host my own. Hosted solutions just seemed be much more feature rich and often for pennies.

Next up we will be talking about how I structured the code when building my libraries, and some tricks I learnt about .NET Standard versioning (Seriously – so much harder than I thought). Check it out here!