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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T20:05:58+00:00 2026-05-10T20:05:58+00:00

In Visual Studio website projects (in Visual Studio 2005 or later, not web application

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In Visual Studio website projects (in Visual Studio 2005 or later, not web application projects where there is still a .csproj file) how is the reference information stored, and is it possible to source control it without storing compiled binaries in source control?

If you right-click on a website project and select Property Pages, the first screen (References) lists all the project references.

System.* references are listed as type GAC, and other DLL files can be listed as BIN or Project.

The problem occurs when you include something as a project reference, and then commit it to source control (for us, Subversion, ignoring .dll and .pdb files.)

Another developer gets updated code from the repository and has to manually set up all of these project references, but I can’t even determine where this information is stored, unless it’s in that .suo, which is NOT source-control friendly.

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  1. 2026-05-10T20:05:59+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 8:05 pm

    If you reference a .dll by file name through the browse tab, there should be a .refresh file created (nested under the dll in BIN). We put those in SVN and it works great (you may have to hand edit them to use relative paths).

    References added from the .NET tab are added to web.config

    Project references are stored in the solution (.sln) file. Open the .sln file and you’ll see them listed:

    Project('{xxxxxxx-7377-xxxx-xxxx-BC803B73C61A}') = 'XXXXXXX.Web', 'XXXXXXX.Web', '{xxxxxxxx-BB14-xxxx-B3B6-8BF6D8BC5AFF}'     ProjectSection(WebsiteProperties) = preProject         TargetFramework = '3.5'         ProjectReferences = '{xxxxxxxx-C3AB-xxxx-BBED-2055287036E5}|XXXXXX.Data.dll;             ... 
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