As a part of simplifying the way we build ASP.NET Core, the BrowserLink and Scaffolding repos and the packages they produce will be independent from aspnet/AspNetCore.
As a part of merging and reducing the number of repos we use, the aspnet/Common repo was renamed to aspnet/Extensions and it now builds on its own and not as a submodule of this repo.
Remove the aspnet/WebHooks universe from building with Universe.
This is part of consolidating repos and preparing aspnet/Universe to move into https://github.com/aspnet/AspNetCore
As a part of converging repos, we no longer need this code. It is currently buggy and slow, and we can get away without by hard-coding the repo graph (which rarely changes)
Our policy since 1.0.0 has been to always cascade version updates in the packages we own. e.g. if Logging has a product change in 2.1.x, then Kestrel, EF Core, Mvc, etc also re-ship with the updated Logging dependency. This has been done for a variety of reasons:
* NuGet does not show updates for transitive dependencies, only direct ones
* NuGet does resolves the lowest compatible transitive dependencies
* ASP.NET Core ships to both .NET Framework (where transitive dependency version matters) and .NET Core (where it matters less if you use the shared framework)
While transitive dependencies is still an important scenario, this practice of always patching has led to bigger issues.
* High probability users will unintentionally upgrade out of the shared framework: #3307
* Conflicts with metapackages that attempt to use exact version constraints: aspnet/Universe#1180
* A quality perception issue: the high volume of new versions in servicing updates with only metadata changes has created the impression that new versions of packages may not be very important. It's also made it appear like there are more issues product than there really are.
* High volume of packages changing with only metadata changes. Of the last 301 packages published in a servicing update, only 11 contained actual changes to the implementation assemblies. (3.5%)
This change implements a system to verify a new, non-cascading versioning policy for servicing updates. This required changes to repos to pin version variables to that matter per-repo,
and to remove some of the restrictions and checks.
Incidentally, this should make defining new patches easier because it automatically determines which packages are or are not patching in the release.