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Visual Studio 2017 Extension Upgrade Re-Installed Android NDK?!?!?

So recently I had an update pending for Regate SQL Change Automation Core. When it went to install it was hanging for quite a while, then I noticed it was installing the Android NDK?!?!? I updated my NDK location a while back and for some reason the Regate SQL Change Automation Core Install did not respect this, and wanted it in the default location for some reason (i.e. C:\Microsoft\AndroidNDK64\android-ndk-r13b), now I have two NDKs installed... I assume this is an oversight / bug that should be fixed.

Here are some screenshots: (I have also attached my extension installation log).




Maxeta
0

Comments

6 comments

  • Dan B
    Hi Mexeta,

    Thanks for posting on the Redgate forums.

    I will investigate this with the dev team and come back to you as soon as possible.
    Dan B
    0
  • Dan B
    Hi Mexeta,

    After reviewing this further this appears to be an issue with the VSIX installer rather than with the Redgate tooling. I would advise you reach out to Microsoft to see if they can help you to resolve this one.
    Dan B
    0
  • Alex Morgan

    Yeah, that definitely sounds like an oversight. The installer shouldn’t be forcing the default NDK path, especially if you've already updated it. I had a similar issue while working on a setup for getmodsapk.com — having two NDKs caused all kinds of confusion. Hopefully, they patch this in the next update. Thanks for sharing the logs and screenshots, super helpful!

    Alex Morgan
    -1
  • williamoliverkcyu6c

    Yeah, that definitely sounds like an oversight — ideally the installer should respect your updated NDK path instead of forcing a default install. Having two NDKs can get messy, especially when different tools start referencing different locations. Reporting it as a bug to the vendor would be the best move here. For quick checks and references, I usually keep resources like http://onlinesassastatuscheck.co.za/ handy — makes it easier to stay organized when dealing with updates and fixes.

    williamoliverkcyu6c
    -1
  • Luiz0022

    Yeah, that definitely sounds like an oversight — ideally the installer should respect your updated NDK path instead of forcing a default install. Having two NDKs can get messy, especially when different tools start referencing different locations. Reporting it as a bug to the vendor would be the best move here. For quick checks and references, I usually keep resources like Surflix APK handy — makes it easier to stay organized when dealing with updates and fixes.

    Luiz0022
    -1
  • Premium Solutions

    It definitely sounds like an installation oversight or configuration bug. The Regate SQL Change Automation Core installer likely references a hardcoded or default Android NDK path instead of checking your updated environment variables or Visual Studio settings. This would explain why it attempted to reinstall the NDK in the default directory even though you’d already configured a different location. Having duplicate NDK installations shouldn’t break functionality, but it’s unnecessary and can waste storage. You might want to report this behavior to the Redgate support team along with your installation log—they’ll be able to confirm whether it’s a known issue or provide a fix in a future update. I also faced the same installation bug while installing dodear pk.

    Premium Solutions
    -1

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