The C++ project I'm working on (which I converted from VS2008 to VS2010) used to use several vcbuild .rules files to specify custom build rules. These .rules files had a specific "AdditionalDependencies" property for the CustomBuildRule node which specified a list of files that the should be taken into account when working out if the target needs rebuilding or not. These "AdditionalDependencies" were faithfully carried over into the corresponding .props file during the VS2010 conversion.
The .targets file associated with the custom build rule does add these AdditionalDependencies to the Inputs property of the Target node. This ensures that the target gets executed in case any of the files listed in the dependencies doesn't exist, but it does not execute the target if one of the dependencies is newer than the target's output. It's also not quite logically correct as not all of the files are actually inputs, several of them refer to executables that might be used during the target's build. As such, they might be checked into version control and will be present, but a newer version of the file needs to trigger a rebuild of the affected target.
The MSDN documentation for the Target node shows a Condition property which should work fine for my requirements, but the conditions supported by this property don't appear go past the 'Exists' test that is already being performed.
Is there a condition that I can use which will compare two files' time stamps (or ideally, the time stamp of the files currently listed in AdditionalDependencies against the Target's output files) and thus allow me to trigger a make-like "rebuild this target if it is out of date these dependencies"?