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Home/ Questions/Q 845597
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T06:28:41+00:00 2026-05-15T06:28:41+00:00

VB.NET: Can the .EXE built by VS2005 be deployed as a standalone EXE ?

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VB.NET: Can the .EXE built by VS2005 be deployed as a standalone EXE?

When I change the mode in VS2005 to “Release” and build the solution, the bin\Release directory then contains the solution .EXE file, but also a .pdb, vshost.exe and .xml file. What are these extra files and are they necessary?

I copied the .exe file to another machine and it executed properly, but there was a significant delay when it first executed – thereafter it was like any other program. What is the reason for this, and can it be helped? Is it because the other 3 files in the Release folder are not there with it?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T06:28:42+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 6:28 am

    The project template that you used to get the project started doesn’t have very optimum settings. You’ll get the clutter as a result. It is easily fixable. Start with Project + Properties, Compile tab. Make sure the Release build is selected, upper left combo box labeled Configuration.

    • The .pdb file contains debugging symbols. You don’t need it for the Release build although you get slightly more informative exception messages. The stack trace will contain line numbers. You cannot trust them for a Release build though. Click Advanced Compile Options, Generate debug info = None.

    • The .xml file contains IntelliSense info, it will be generated when you use XML Documentation in your source code. Meant to be used for assemblies that are referenced in another project, quite pointless for an EXE project. Turn off the “Generate XML documentation file” option on the Compile tab.

    • The .vshost.exe file is a helper process for debugging your app. It hosts a custom version of CLR, configured differently to help with security issues while debugging. It also makes the output of Console.WriteLine() appear in the Visual Studio Output window. There’s little point in having it created for the Release build. Select the Debug tab and uncheck the “Enable the Visual Studio hosting process” option.

    After making these changes and rebuilding, you should only have the .exe file left in the bin\Release folder.

    The slow startup is what’s called a “cold start” of the .NET framework assemblies. It is caused by a slow or fragmented hard drive. Since the DLLs were never loaded before, the disk drive needs to dig through the GAC to find the files. You can probably improve it by defragging the disk. Cold starts are never as fast as warm starts though.

    A classic trick, used by Microsoft Office and Adobe Acrobat, is to warm up the file system cache by loading their DLLs at login time. They are called “optimizer” in the Startup folder or Run registry key. Very annoying btw, they slow down other programs. You can do the same thing by writing your own little .NET program that doesn’t do anything but create a few classes. Put a shortcut to it in the Startup folder.

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