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dotnet-watch(1) .NET Documentation dotnet-watch(1)

dotnet watch

This article applies to: ✔️ .NET Core 3.1 SDK and later versions

NAME

dotnet-watch - Restarts or hot reloads the specified application, or runs a specified dotnet command, when changes in source code are detected.

SYNOPSIS

dotnet watch [<command>]

[--list]
[--no-hot-reload] [--non-interactive]
[--project <PROJECT>]
[-q|--quiet] [-v|--verbose]
[--version]
[--] <forwarded arguments> dotnet watch -?|-h|--help

DESCRIPTION

The dotnet watch command is a file watcher. When it detects a change, it runs the dotnet run command or a specified dotnet command. If it runs dotnet run, and the change is supported for hot reload, it hot reloads the specified application. If the change isn’t supported, it restarts the application. This process enables fast iterative development from the command line.

While running dotnet watch, you can force the app to rebuild and restart by pressing Ctrl+R in the command shell. This feature is available only while the app is running. For example, if you run dotnet watch on a console app that ends before you press Ctrl+R, pressing Ctrl+R has no effect. However, in that case dotnet watch is still watching files and will restart the app if a file is updated.

Response compression

If dotnet watch runs for an app that uses response compression, the tool can’t inject the browser refresh script. The .NET 7 and later version of the tool displays a warning message like the following:

warn: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Watch.BrowserRefresh.BrowserRefreshMiddleware[4]

Unable to configure browser refresh script injection on the response. This may have been caused by the response’s Content-Encoding: `br'. Consider disabling response compression.

As an alternative to disabling response compression, manually add the browser refresh JavaScript reference to the app’s pages:

@if (Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("__ASPNETCORE_BROWSER_TOOLS") is not null)
{

<script src="/_framework/aspnetcore-browser-refresh.js"></script> }

ARGUMENTS

command

dotnet watch can run any command that is dispatched via the dotnet executable, such as built-in CLI commands and global tools. If you can run dotnet <command>, you can run dotnet watch <command>. If the child command isn’t specified, the default is run for dotnet run.

forwarded arguments

Arguments provided after a double dash (--) are passed to the child dotnet process. If you’re running dotnet watch run, these arguments are options for dotnet run. If you’re running dotnet watch test, these arguments are options for dotnet test.

OPTIONS

--list

Lists all discovered files without starting the watcher.

--no-hot-reload

Suppress hot reload for supported apps.

--non-interactive

Runs dotnet watch in non-interactive mode. Use this option to prevent console input from being requested. When hot reload is enabled and a rude edit is detected, dotnet watch restarts the app. Available since .NET 7 SDK.

--project <PATH>

Specifies the path of the project file to run (folder only or including the project file name). If not specified, it defaults to the current directory.

-q|--quiet

Suppresses all output that is generated by the dotnet watch command except warnings and errors. The option is not passed on to child commands. For example, output from dotnet restore and dotnet run continues to be output.

-v|--verbose

Shows verbose output for debugging.

--version

Shows the version of dotnet watch.

--

The double-dash option (`–') can be used to delimit dotnet watch options from arguments that will be passed to the child process. Its use is optional. When the double-dash option isn’t used, dotnet watch considers the first unrecognized argument to be the beginning of arguments that it should pass into the child dotnet process.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

dotnet watch uses the following environment variables:

DOTNET_HOTRELOAD_NAMEDPIPE_NAME

This value is configured by dotnet watch when the app is to be launched, and it specifies the named pipe.

DOTNET_USE_POLLING_FILE_WATCHER

When set to 1 or true, dotnet watch uses a polling file watcher instead of <xref:System.IO.FileSystemWatcher?displayProperty=nameWithType>. Polling is required for some file systems, such as network shares, Docker mounted volumes, and other virtual file systems. The <xref:Microsoft.Extensions.FileProviders.PhysicalFileProvider> class uses DOTNET_USE_POLLING_FILE_WATCHER to determine whether the <xref:Microsoft.Extensions.FileProviders.PhysicalFileProvider.Watch%2A?displayProperty=nameWithType> method will rely on the <xref:Microsoft.Extensions.FileProviders.Physical.PollingFileChangeToken>.

DOTNET_WATCH

dotnet watch sets this variable to 1 on all child processes that it launches.

DOTNET_WATCH_AUTO_RELOAD_WS_HOSTNAME

As part of dotnet watch, the browser refresh server mechanism reads this value to determine the WebSocket host environment. The value 127.0.0.1 is replaced by localhost, and the http:// and https:// schemes are replaced with ws:// and wss:// respectively.

DOTNET_WATCH_ITERATION

dotnet watch sets this variable to 1 and increments by one each time a file is changed and the command restarts or hot reloads the application.

DOTNET_WATCH_SUPPRESS_BROWSER_REFRESH

When set to 1 or true, dotnet watch won’t refresh browsers when it detects file changes.

DOTNET_WATCH_SUPPRESS_EMOJIS

With the .NET SDK 6.0.300 and later, dotnet watch emits non-ASCII characters to the console, as shown in the following example:

dotnet watch 🔥 Hot reload enabled. For a list of supported edits, see https://aka.ms/dotnet/hot-reload.

💡 Press "Ctrl + R" to restart. dotnet watch 🔧 Building... dotnet watch 🚀 Started dotnet watch ⌚ Exited dotnet watch ⏳ Waiting for a file to change before restarting dotnet...

On certain console hosts, these characters may appear garbled. To avoid seeing garbled characters, set this variable to 1 or true.

DOTNET_WATCH_SUPPRESS_LAUNCH_BROWSER

When set to 1 or true, dotnet watch won’t launch or refresh browsers for web apps that have launchBrowser configured in launchSettings.json.

DOTNET_WATCH_SUPPRESS_MSBUILD_INCREMENTALISM

By default, dotnet watch optimizes the build by avoiding certain operations, such as running restore or re-evaluating the set of watched files on every file change. If this variable is set to 1 or true, these optimizations are disabled.

DOTNET_WATCH_SUPPRESS_STATIC_FILE_HANDLING

When set to 1 or true, dotnet watch won’t do special handling for static content files. dotnet watch sets MSBuild property DotNetWatchContentFiles to false.

DOTNET_WATCH_RESTART_ON_RUDE_EDIT

When set to 1 or true, dotnet watch will always restart on rude edits instead of asking.

Files watched by default

dotnet watch watches all items in the Watch item group in the project file. By default, this group includes all items in the Compile and EmbeddedResource groups. dotnet watch also scans the entire graph of project references and watches all files within those projects.

By default, the Compile and EmbeddedResource groups include all files matching the following glob patterns:

**/*.cs
*.csproj
**/*.resx
Content files in web apps: wwwroot/**

By default, .config, and .json files don’t trigger a dotnet watch restart because the configuration system has its own mechanisms for handling configuration changes.

Files can be added to the watch list or removed from the list by editing the project file. Files can be specified individually or by using glob patterns.

Watch additional files

More files can be watched by adding items to the Watch group. For example, the following markup extends that group to include JavaScript files:

<ItemGroup>

<Watch Include="**\*.js" Exclude="node_modules\**\*;**\*.js.map;obj\**\*;bin\**\*" /> </ItemGroup>

Ignore specified files

dotnet watch will ignore Compile and EmbeddedResource items that have the Watch="false" attribute, as shown in the following example:

<ItemGroup>

<Compile Update="Generated.cs" Watch="false" />
<EmbeddedResource Update="Strings.resx" Watch="false" /> </ItemGroup>

dotnet watch will ignore project references that have the Watch="false" attribute, as shown in the following example:

<ItemGroup>

<ProjectReference Include="..\ClassLibrary1\ClassLibrary1.csproj" Watch="false" /> </ItemGroup>

Advanced configuration

dotnet watch performs a design-time build to find items to watch. When this build is run, dotnet watch sets the property DotNetWatchBuild=true. This property can be used as shown in the following example:

<ItemGroup Condition="'$(DotNetWatchBuild)'=='true'">

<!-- only included in the project when dotnet-watch is running --> </ItemGroup>

Hot Reload

Starting in .NET 6, dotnet watch includes support for hot reload. Hot reload is a feature that lets you apply changes to a running app without having to rebuild and restart it. The changes may be to code files or static assets, such as stylesheet files and JavaScript files. This feature streamlines the local development experience, as it gives immediate feedback when you modify your app.

For information about app types and .NET versions that support hot reload, see Supported .NET app frameworks and scenarios.

Rude edits

When a file is modified, dotnet watch determines if the app can be hot reloaded. If it can’t be hot reloaded, the change is called a rude edit and dotnet watch asks if you want to restart the app:

dotnet watch ⌚ Unable to apply hot reload because of a rude edit.

❔ Do you want to restart your app - Yes (y) / No (n) / Always (a) / Never (v)?
Yes: Restarts the app.
No: Leaves the app running without the changes applied.
Always: Restarts the app and doesn’t prompt anymore for rude edits.
Never: Leaves the app running without the changes applied and doesn’t prompt anymore for rude edits.

For information about what kinds of changes are considered rude edits, see Edit code and continue debugging and Unsupported changes to code.

To disable hot reload when you run dotnet watch, use the --no-hot-reload option, as shown in the following example:

.NET CLI dotnet watch --no-hot-reload

EXAMPLES

Run dotnet run for the project in the current directory whenever source code changes:
dotnet watch
    

Or:

dotnet watch run
    
Run dotnet test for the project in the current directory whenever source code changes:
dotnet watch test
    
Run dotnet run --project ./HelloWorld.csproj whenever source code changes:
dotnet watch run --project  ./HelloWorld.csproj
    
Run dotnet run -- arg0 for the project in the current directory whenever source code changes:
dotnet watch run -- arg0
    

Or:

dotnet watch -- run arg0
    

SEE ALSO

Tutorial: Develop ASP.NET Core apps using a file watcher
Hot reload in Visual Studio
Hot reload supported apps
Hot reload supported code changes
Hot reload test execution
Hot reload support for ASP.NET Core
2023-10-25