VS 2017 Offline Downloads
-
This is not a programming question but just a view regarding Visual Studio downloads. Unlike the previous Visual Studio installs and downloads, 2017 seems to be little painful. 1) The installer does not have pretty straight forward web install. 2) The offline too is rather very fat around 40 GB 3) Even the installation needs specific group policies to be enabled on the corporate environment. For me, net.exe was blocked by Group Policy and I had to request the system administrator to exempt my desktop to go ahead installing the IDE. How many have moved or upgraded to VS 2017? What are your experiences?
One annoying thing is that for the team, each machine has to download separately rather than a single offline installer shared. While this may work in most countries, we're still heavily restricted in bandwidth here ( South Africa ) and having to explain why the department suddenly pulls 50Gb in a day is an annoyance. And don't get me started on windows 10 updates and its download habbits.. But otherwise,yes , love the IDE.
-
This is not a programming question but just a view regarding Visual Studio downloads. Unlike the previous Visual Studio installs and downloads, 2017 seems to be little painful. 1) The installer does not have pretty straight forward web install. 2) The offline too is rather very fat around 40 GB 3) Even the installation needs specific group policies to be enabled on the corporate environment. For me, net.exe was blocked by Group Policy and I had to request the system administrator to exempt my desktop to go ahead installing the IDE. How many have moved or upgraded to VS 2017? What are your experiences?
I haven't upgraded to VS 2017 yet as I have hear too many issues with it. As a result I am still using VS 2015 with no issues at all. I may skip 2017 altogether and wait until the next release, which is what I have done in the past.
Steve Naidamast Sr. Software Engineer Black Falcon Software, Inc. blackfalconsoftware@outlook.com
-
One annoying thing is that for the team, each machine has to download separately rather than a single offline installer shared. While this may work in most countries, we're still heavily restricted in bandwidth here ( South Africa ) and having to explain why the department suddenly pulls 50Gb in a day is an annoyance. And don't get me started on windows 10 updates and its download habbits.. But otherwise,yes , love the IDE.
-
Do you stil pay for every byte of bandwidth used in SA, or can you get unlimited bandwidth for a fixed amount?
Get me coffee and no one gets hurt!
Depends on type. You do have some uncapped accounts but they normally have severe fups etc. We have a high speed ( for us ) synchronis fibre link on our mpls backbone which basically means we have decent support if it breaks. Normal internet support is laughable and best effort. To answer your question, yes we have pay per byte and unlimited, but even with unlimited its a large amount of bandwidth to use if the pipe is shared with the balance of the company and its kind of silly for every dev machine to have to do the same download rather than a single repository server that they talk to.
-
Depends on type. You do have some uncapped accounts but they normally have severe fups etc. We have a high speed ( for us ) synchronis fibre link on our mpls backbone which basically means we have decent support if it breaks. Normal internet support is laughable and best effort. To answer your question, yes we have pay per byte and unlimited, but even with unlimited its a large amount of bandwidth to use if the pipe is shared with the balance of the company and its kind of silly for every dev machine to have to do the same download rather than a single repository server that they talk to.
-
This is not a programming question but just a view regarding Visual Studio downloads. Unlike the previous Visual Studio installs and downloads, 2017 seems to be little painful. 1) The installer does not have pretty straight forward web install. 2) The offline too is rather very fat around 40 GB 3) Even the installation needs specific group policies to be enabled on the corporate environment. For me, net.exe was blocked by Group Policy and I had to request the system administrator to exempt my desktop to go ahead installing the IDE. How many have moved or upgraded to VS 2017? What are your experiences?
-
The downloader also has put me off so far. It's one thing to say you can select just the components you need/want (via an :elephant:ing command line). I've wondered if you later want to add one more component, do you need to rebuild the entire selective download or can you add-on just the individual item(s) (Not clear in the instructions and even answers - seems to look like you need to know what you want and will ever need first time around.) My bet is most give up on pathetically designed selection process and just take the lot; yeah sure: disk space (even SSD) is plentiful and cheap nowadays but still, that seems too much like buying 6 happy meals to get a complete set of the new free toys - just wasteful.
Signature ready for installation. Please Reboot now.
-
The downloader also has put me off so far. It's one thing to say you can select just the components you need/want (via an :elephant:ing command line). I've wondered if you later want to add one more component, do you need to rebuild the entire selective download or can you add-on just the individual item(s) (Not clear in the instructions and even answers - seems to look like you need to know what you want and will ever need first time around.) My bet is most give up on pathetically designed selection process and just take the lot; yeah sure: disk space (even SSD) is plentiful and cheap nowadays but still, that seems too much like buying 6 happy meals to get a complete set of the new free toys - just wasteful.
Signature ready for installation. Please Reboot now.
-
Ah, but my questions are: 1. does the gui allow altering the config (i.e. add/remove)? 2. can it build an off-line installer set? 3. [for both #1 and #2] if you alter components does it re-build (re-download) the entire set or just alter the affected parts?
Signature ready for installation. Please Reboot now.
Scott Hanselman has a blog post on how to build an offline installer [here ](https://www.hanselman.com/blog/HowToMakeAnOfflineInstallerForVS2017.aspx)
-
Quote:
Normal internet support is laughable and best effort.
I suppose some government entity (like Telkom?) has a state controlled monopoly over the Internet service. That will explain your remark! :sigh:
Get me coffee and no one gets hurt!
Mostly copper backend yes. As fibre becomes more prevalent and other meduims that may change but basic internet is always deemed a best effort service, unless you pay for a mpls level support or run it through such a pipe.
-
This is not a programming question but just a view regarding Visual Studio downloads. Unlike the previous Visual Studio installs and downloads, 2017 seems to be little painful. 1) The installer does not have pretty straight forward web install. 2) The offline too is rather very fat around 40 GB 3) Even the installation needs specific group policies to be enabled on the corporate environment. For me, net.exe was blocked by Group Policy and I had to request the system administrator to exempt my desktop to go ahead installing the IDE. How many have moved or upgraded to VS 2017? What are your experiences?
Deepak Vasudevan wrote:
How many have moved or upgraded to VS 2017? What are your experiences?
I tried the preview, then went to the release. I have not had problems with it. My biggest complaint is that Xamarin.Forms 3.0 is not released yet.