The reference in the deployment does not match the identity defined in the application manifest..

when you occur issue "The reference in the deployment does not match the identity defined in the application manifest" in Click once deployment with VS 2008/VS2010. please reference the following steps.

Scope:

Winform or WPF application:


Steps:

1. Create a solution with two Windows Application projects, WinAppA and WinAppB.

2. Set WinAppA as publish project and add a reference to the WinAppB.

3. Open WinAppB properties window.

4. Click Signing tab, sign the ClickOnce manifests.

5. Click Security tab, enable the ClickOnce security settings.

6. Publish the WinAppA, publish well.

7. Test published WinAppA, it works well.
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Just like the other books I wrote, this one does not have a fixed scope. I did not start with an index. I didn't write a summary of each chapter in an attempt to define the scope. I do not do such things. There is only a high-level goal to explore continuous delivery and deployment inside Kubernetes clusters. What I did do, though, was to set a few guidelines. The first guideline is that all the examples will be tested on all major Kubernetes platforms. Well, that might be a bit far-fetched. I'm aware that any sentence that mentions "all" together with "Kubernetes" is bound to be incorrect. New platforms are popping out like mushrooms after rain. Still, what I can certainly do is to choose a few of the most commonly used ones. Minikube and Docker for Mac or Windows should undoubtedly be there for those who prefer to "play" with Docker locally. AWS is the biggest hosting provider so Kubernetes Operations (kops) must be included as well. Since it would be silly to cover only un-managed cloud, I had to include managed Kubernetes clusters as well. Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE) is the obvious choice. It is the most stable and features rich managed Kubernetes solution. Adding GKE to the mix means that Azure Container Service (AKS) and Amazon's Elastic Container Service (EKS) should be included as well so that we can have the "big trio" of the hosting vendors that offer managed Kubernetes. Unfortunately, even though AKS is available, it is, at this moment (June 2018), still too unstable and it's missing a lot of features. So, I'm forced to scale down from the trio to the GKE and EKS duo as representatives of managed Kubernetes we'll explore. Finally, a possible on-prem solution should be included as well. Since OpenShift shines in that area, the choice was relatively easy. All in all, I decided to test everything in minikube and Docker for Mac locally, AWS with kops as the representative of a cluster in the cloud, GKE for managed Kubernetes clusters, and OpenShift (

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