Click here to hide categories Click here to show left categories

User: Home          welcome : Guest          Log In / Register here     




Difference between assembly manifest & metadata

assembly manifest - An integral part of every assembly that renders the assembly self-describing. The assembly manifest contains the assembly s metadata. The manifest establishes the assembly identity, specifies the files that make up the assembly implementation, specifies the types and resources that make up the assembly, itemizes the compile-time dependencies on other assemblies, and specifies the set of permissions required for the assembly to run properly. This information is used at run time to resolve references, enforce version binding policy, and validate the integrity of loaded assemblies. The self-describing nature of assemblies also helps makes zero-impact install and XCOPY deployment feasible.

metadata - Information that describes every element managed by the common language runtime: an assembly, loadable file, type, method, and so on. This can include information required for debugging and garbage collection, as well as security attributes, marshaling data, extended class and member definitions, version binding, and other information required by the runtime.

Share this article   |    Print    |    Article read by 3264 times
Author:
Guest
Guest user is that user who have done some activity on website without login. Activity contains commenting on any article, uploading an image on website etc.
Related Articles: No related article
Related Interview Questions: