Now, I understand. Thank you. Running the assemblies in separate AppDomains 
causes the correct assemblies to be loaded; however, the leaf nodes for some of 
the assemblies don't update and remain gray after the test runs. That should 
probably be reported as a separate bug. Still, I think the reference assemblies 
should only be searched for in the path of whichever assembly is being tested.

-- 
Failed tests: Could not load file or assembly
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/680735
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Status in NUnit V2 Test Framework: New

Bug description:
NUNIT VERSION
NUnit 2.5.7.10213

DESCRIPTION
When multiple test assemblies are loaded into NUnit, and they reference 
different strongly named assemblies with the same file name, all but the first 
assembly fails all tests. The tests fail indicating the following exception was 
thrown:

NUnitTests.Common.ByteExtensionsTests.HighNibble:
System.IO.FileLoadException : Could not load file or assembly 'NLib, 
Version=1.1.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=16fb73b766f2d210' or one of 
its dependencies. The located assembly's manifest definition does not match the 
assembly reference. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80131040)

PROBABLE CAUSE
By using fuslogvw.exe and reading about Microsoft's assembly loader, I have 
concluded the following: When Microsoft's assembly loader is searching for an 
assembly, it stops looking on the first directory containing an assembly with 
the correct file name. If the found assembly differs by version number or 
PublicKeyToken, a FileLoadException is thrown instead of looking further. This 
is apparently by design by Microsoft for performance reasons, although 
unintuitive. NUnit appears to cause the test assembly to search for referenced 
assemblies in the directories of ALL loaded test assemblies, and in the same 
order. Thus, the wrong assembly is used from the wrong directory. Under the 
unlikely case the referenced assemblies weren't strongly named, no error would 
be thrown indicating the wrong library is being tested.

SIGNIFICANCE
Using assemblies with identical names is useful when creating libraries to 
target multiple .NET Framework versions. NUnit 2.5.7 is unusable as a means to 
test the assemblies simultaneously, and it becomes necessary to test each piece 
of the final solution separately.



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