I have a custom section in the configSections of my App.config file, how can I change the value of one of the variables of this section in code?
The section I would like to change is "serverConfiguration", and I want to change the value of "serverUrl":
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<configuration>
<configSections>
<section name="serverConfiguration" type="someType" />
</configSections>
<serverConfiguration serverUrl="http://development/server/" />
</configuration>
I found this piece of code below from this previous question, App.Config change value.
It looks close to what I need, but I am not sure how to change it myself to use it for a custom section rather than the AppSettings. Will the code below work for what I am trying to do? How do I change the code below to allow me to pass this new String as serverUrl "http://staging/server/"? Thanks!
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
UpdateSetting("lang", "Russian");
}
private static void UpdateSetting(string key, string value)
{
Configuration configuration = ConfigurationManager.OpenExeConfiguration(ConfigurationUserLevel.None);
configuration.AppSettings.Settings[key].Value = value;
configuration.Save();
ConfigurationManager.RefreshSection("appSettings");
}
}
You have an option to load the config into XML, edit the node value and save it back. Give a try with this
var xmlDoc = new XmlDocument();
xmlDoc.Load(AppDomain.CurrentDomain.SetupInformation.ConfigurationFile);
xmlDoc.SelectSingleNode("//serverConfiguration").Attributes["serverUrl"].Value = "http://staging/server/";
xmlDoc.Save(AppDomain.CurrentDomain.SetupInformation.ConfigurationFile);
Probably, it is a good idea to refresh the Config sections after file is saved.
ConfigurationManager.RefreshSection
I know similar question was asked before more than once. I read some of the answers yet didn't find a clear one for my issue. To the point, I two applications say A & B. App A has a configuration file as follows:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<configuration>
<appSettings>
<add key = "Key0" value = "4567" />
<add key = "Key1" value = "1" />
<add key = "Key2" value = "2" />
</appSettings>
</configuration>
App B tries to modify "Key0" of App A configuration file:
namespace ModifyOtherConfig
{
public partial class Form1 : Form
{
string otherConfigFilePath;
public Form1()
{
InitializeComponent();
}
private void exitToolStripMenuItem_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
Application.Exit();
}
private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
ExeConfigurationFileMap fileMap = new ExeConfigurationFileMap();
fileMap.ExeConfigFilename = #"c:\users\om606\documents\visual studio 2015\projects\csharptesting\csharptesting\bin\debug\csharptesting.exe";
Configuration otherConfig = ConfigurationManager.OpenMappedExeConfiguration(fileMap, ConfigurationUserLevel.None);
string otherSetting = otherConfig.AppSettings.Settings["Key0"].Value;
MessageBox.Show(otherSetting);
otherSetting = "098";
MessageBox.Show(otherSetting);
otherConfig.SaveAs(fileMap.ExeConfigFilename, ConfigurationSaveMode.Full);
}
}
}
When I try to run this code I get the following error:
An unhandled exception of type 'System.Configuration.ConfigurationErrorsException' occurred in System.Configuration.dll
Additional information: Data at the root level is invalid. Line 1, position 1.
What do I do wrong? Do I miss something very obvious? I'd appreciate if someone could point me in the right direction.
Oh, you're pointing your fileMap.ExeConfigFilename to the .exe, change it to point to the .config file instead. That's why you are seeing the xml error.
fileMap.ExeConfigFilename = #"c:\users\om606\documents\visual studio 2015\projects\csharptesting\csharptesting\bin\debug\csharptesting.exe.config";
for your other issue, do:
otherConfig.AppSettings.Settings.Remove("Key0");
otherConfig.AppSettings.Settings.Add("Key0", "098");
then save it.
I'm trying to get a value from my configuration file
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<configuration>
<appSettings>
<add key="MusicPath" value="C:/Users/Alvaro/Music" />
</appSettings>
</configuration>
And this is how I handle it
this.config = new ConfigurationHandler();
String musicPath = this.config.MusicPath();
DirectoryInfo dinfo = new DirectoryInfo(musicPath);
And this is the ConfigurationHandler class
namespace RaggaerPlayer.Class
{
class ConfigurationHandler
{
public String MusicPath()
{
String path = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["MusicPath"];
return path;
}
}
}
But I got an error at the DirectoryInfo variable "Value cannot be null".. what am I doing wrong?
I believe the file should be named App.config. You could rename it, but I think this causes versioning problems.
I usually use a text file as a config. But this time I would like to utilize app.config to associate a file name (key) with a name (value) and make the names available in combo box
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<configuration>
<appSettings>
<add key="Scenario1.doc" value="Hybrid1"/>
<add key="Scenario2.doc" value="Hybrid2"/>
<add key="Scenario3.doc" value="Hybrid3"/>
</appSettings>
</configuration>
will this work? how to retrieve the data ?
Straight from the docs:
using System.Configuration;
// Get the AppSettings section.
// This function uses the AppSettings property
// to read the appSettings configuration
// section.
public static void ReadAppSettings()
{
try
{
// Get the AppSettings section.
NameValueCollection appSettings = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings;
// Get the AppSettings section elements.
Console.WriteLine();
Console.WriteLine("Using AppSettings property.");
Console.WriteLine("Application settings:");
if (appSettings.Count == 0)
{
Console.WriteLine("[ReadAppSettings: {0}]",
"AppSettings is empty Use GetSection command first.");
}
for (int i = 0; i < appSettings.Count; i++)
{
Console.WriteLine("#{0} Key: {1} Value: {2}",i, appSettings.GetKey(i), appSettings[i]);
}
}
catch (ConfigurationErrorsException e)
{
Console.WriteLine("[ReadAppSettings: {0}]", e.ToString());
}
}
So, if you want to access the setting Scenario1.doc, you would do this:
var value = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["Scenario1.doc"];
Edit:
As Gabriel GM said in the comments, you will have to add a reference to System.Configuration.
app settings in app.config are to store application/environment specific settings not to store data which binds to UI.
If you cant avoid storing in config because of weird business requests I would rather stick to one single setting
<add key="FileDropDown" value="File1-Value|File2-Value" />
and write C# code to get this setting ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["FileDropDown"] and do some string Splits ('|') and ('-') to create kvp collection and bind it to UI.
Is it is possible to do something like the following in the app.config or web.config files?
<appSettings>
<add key="MyBaseDir" value="C:\MyBase" />
<add key="Dir1" value="[MyBaseDir]\Dir1"/>
<add key="Dir2" value="[MyBaseDir]\Dir2"/>
</appSettings>
I then want to access Dir2 in my code by simply saying:
ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["Dir2"]
This will help me when I install my application in different servers and locations wherein I will only have to change ONE entry in my entire app.config.
(I know I can manage all the concatenation in code, but I prefer it this way).
A slightly more complicated, but far more flexible, alternative is to create a class that represents a configuration section. In your app.config / web.config file, you can have this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<configuration>
<!-- This section must be the first section within the <configuration> node -->
<configSections>
<section name="DirectoryInfo" type="MyProjectNamespace.DirectoryInfoConfigSection, MyProjectAssemblyName" />
</configSections>
<DirectoryInfo>
<Directory MyBaseDir="C:\MyBase" Dir1="Dir1" Dir2="Dir2" />
</DirectoryInfo>
</configuration>
Then, in your .NET code (I'll use C# in my example), you can create two classes like this:
using System;
using System.Configuration;
namespace MyProjectNamespace {
public class DirectoryInfoConfigSection : ConfigurationSection {
[ConfigurationProperty("Directory")]
public DirectoryConfigElement Directory {
get {
return (DirectoryConfigElement)base["Directory"];
}
}
public class DirectoryConfigElement : ConfigurationElement {
[ConfigurationProperty("MyBaseDir")]
public String BaseDirectory {
get {
return (String)base["MyBaseDir"];
}
}
[ConfigurationProperty("Dir1")]
public String Directory1 {
get {
return (String)base["Dir1"];
}
}
[ConfigurationProperty("Dir2")]
public String Directory2 {
get {
return (String)base["Dir2"];
}
}
// You can make custom properties to combine your directory names.
public String Directory1Resolved {
get {
return System.IO.Path.Combine(BaseDirectory, Directory1);
}
}
}
}
Finally, in your program code, you can access your app.config variables, using your new classes, in this manner:
DirectoryInfoConfigSection config =
(DirectoryInfoConfigSection)ConfigurationManager.GetSection("DirectoryInfo");
String dir1Path = config.Directory.Directory1Resolved; // This value will equal "C:\MyBase\Dir1"
You can accomplish using my library Expansive. Also available on nuget here.
It was designed with this as a primary use-case.
Moderate Example (using AppSettings as default source for token expansion)
In app.config:
<configuration>
<appSettings>
<add key="Domain" value="mycompany.com"/>
<add key="ServerName" value="db01.{Domain}"/>
</appSettings>
<connectionStrings>
<add name="Default" connectionString="server={ServerName};uid=uid;pwd=pwd;Initial Catalog=master;" provider="System.Data.SqlClient" />
</connectionStrings>
</configuration>
Use the .Expand() extension method on the string to be expanded:
var connectionString = ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["Default"].ConnectionString;
connectionString.Expand() // returns "server=db01.mycompany.com;uid=uid;pwd=pwd;Initial Catalog=master;"
or
Use the Dynamic ConfigurationManager wrapper "Config" as follows (Explicit call to Expand() not necessary):
var serverName = Config.AppSettings.ServerName;
// returns "db01.mycompany.com"
var connectionString = Config.ConnectionStrings.Default;
// returns "server=db01.mycompany.com;uid=uid;pwd=pwd;Initial Catalog=master;"
Advanced Example 1 (using AppSettings as default source for token expansion)
In app.config:
<configuration>
<appSettings>
<add key="Environment" value="dev"/>
<add key="Domain" value="mycompany.com"/>
<add key="UserId" value="uid"/>
<add key="Password" value="pwd"/>
<add key="ServerName" value="db01-{Environment}.{Domain}"/>
<add key="ReportPath" value="\\{ServerName}\SomeFileShare"/>
</appSettings>
<connectionStrings>
<add name="Default" connectionString="server={ServerName};uid={UserId};pwd={Password};Initial Catalog=master;" provider="System.Data.SqlClient" />
</connectionStrings>
</configuration>
Use the .Expand() extension method on the string to be expanded:
var connectionString = ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["Default"].ConnectionString;
connectionString.Expand() // returns "server=db01-dev.mycompany.com;uid=uid;pwd=pwd;Initial Catalog=master;"
Good question.
I don't think there is. I believe it would have been quite well known if there was an easy way, and I see that Microsoft is creating a mechanism in Visual Studio 2010 for deploying different configuration files for deployment and test.
With that said, however; I have found that you in the ConnectionStrings section have a kind of placeholder called "|DataDirectory|". Maybe you could have a look at what's at work there...
Here's a piece from machine.config showing it:
<connectionStrings>
<add
name="LocalSqlServer"
connectionString="data source=.\SQLEXPRESS;Integrated Security=SSPI;AttachDBFilename=|DataDirectory|aspnetdb.mdf;User Instance=true"
providerName="System.Data.SqlClient"
/>
</connectionStrings>
Usally, I end up writing a static class with properties to access each of the settings of my web.config.
public static class ConfigManager
{
public static string MyBaseDir
{
return ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["MyBaseDir"].toString();
}
public static string Dir1
{
return MyBaseDir + ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["Dir1"].toString();
}
}
Usually, I also do type conversions when required in this class. It allows to have a typed access to your config, and if settings change, you can edit them in only one place.
Usually, replacing settings with this class is relatively easy and provides a much greater maintainability.
I thought I just saw this question.
In short, no, there's no variable interpolation within an application configuration.
You have two options
You could roll your own to substitute variables at runtime
At build time, massage the application configuration to the particular specifics of the target deployment environment. Some details on this at dealing with the configuration-nightmare
You have a couple of options. You could do this with a build / deploy step which would process your configuration file replacing your variables with the correct value.
Another option would be to define your own Configuration section which supported this. For example imagine this xml:
<variableAppSettings>
<variables>
<add key="#BaseDir" value="c:\Programs\Widget"/>
</variables>
<appSettings>
<add key="PathToDir" value="#BaseDir\Dir1"/>
</appSettings>
</variableAppSettings>
Now you would implement this using custom configuration objects which would handle replacing the variables for you at runtime.
You can use environment variables in your app.config for that scenario you describe
<configuration>
<appSettings>
<add key="Dir1" value="%MyBaseDir%\Dir1"/>
</appSettings>
</configuration>
Then you can easily get the path with:
var pathFromConfig = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["Dir1"];
var expandedPath = Environment.ExpandEnvironmentVariables(pathFromConfig);
Inside <appSettings> you can create application keys,
<add key="KeyName" value="Keyvalue"/>
Later on you can access these values using:
ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["Keyname"]
I would suggest you DslConfig. With DslConfig you can use hierarchical config files from Global Config, Config per server host to config per application on each server host (see the AppSpike).
If this is to complicated for you you can just use the global config Variables.var
Just configure in Varibales.var
baseDir = "C:\MyBase"
Var["MyBaseDir"] = baseDir
Var["Dir1"] = baseDir + "\Dir1"
Var["Dir2"] = baseDir + "\Dir2"
And get the config values with
Configuration config = new DslConfig.BooDslConfiguration()
config.GetVariable<string>("MyBaseDir")
config.GetVariable<string>("Dir1")
config.GetVariable<string>("Dir2")
I don't think you can declare and use variables to define appSettings keys within a configuration file. I've always managed concatenations in code like you.
I'm struggling a bit with what you want, but you can add an override file to the app settings then have that override file set on a per environment basis.
<appSettings file="..\OverrideSettings.config">
For rolling out products where we need to configure a lot of items with similar values, we use small console apps that read the XML and update based on the parameters passed in. These are then called by the installer after it has asked the user for the required information.
I would recommend following Matt Hamsmith's solution. If it's an issue to implement, then why not create an extension method that implements this in the background on the AppSettings class?
Something like:
public static string GetValue(this NameValueCollection settings, string key)
{
}
Inside the method you search through the DictionaryInfoConfigSection using Linq and return the value with the matching key. You'll need to update the config file though, to something along these lines:
<appSettings>
<DirectoryMappings>
<DirectoryMap key="MyBaseDir" value="C:\MyBase" />
<DirectoryMap key="Dir1" value="[MyBaseDir]\Dir1"/>
<DirectoryMap key="Dir2" value="[MyBaseDir]\Dir2"/>
</DirectoryMappings>
</appSettings>
I came up with this solution:
In the application Settings.settings I defined a variable ConfigurationBase (with type=string Scope=Application)
I introduced a variable in the target attributes in the Settings.settings, all those attributes had to be set to Scope=User
In the app.xaml.cs I read out the value if the ConfigurationBase
In the app.xaml.cs I replaced all variables with the ConfigurationBase value. In order to replace the values at run-time the attributes had to be set to Scopr=User
I'm not really happy with this solution because I have to change all attributes manually, if I add a new one I have to regard it in the app.xaml.cs.
Here a code snippet from the App.xaml.cs:
string configBase = Settings.Default.ConfigurationBase;
Settings.Default.CommonOutput_Directory = Settings.Default.CommonOutput_Directory.Replace("${ConfigurationBase}", configBase);
UPDATE
Just found an improvement (again a code snippet from the app.xaml.cs):
string configBase = Settings.Default.ConfigurationBase;
foreach (SettingsProperty settingsProperty in Settings.Default.Properties)
{
if (!settingsProperty.IsReadOnly && settings.Default[settingsProperty.Name] is string)
{
Settings.Default[settingsProperty.Name] = ((string)Settings.Default[settingsProperty.Name]).Replace("${ConfigurationBase}", configBase);
}
}
Now the replacements work for all attributes in my settings that have Type=string and Scope=User. I think I like it this way.
UPDATE2
Apparently setting Scope=Application is not required when running over the properties.
Three Possible Solutions
I know I'm coming late to the party, I've been looking if there were any new solutions to the variable configuration settings problem. There are a few answers that touch the solutions I have used in the past but most seem a bit convoluted. I thought I'd look at my old solutions and put the implementations together so that it might help people that are struggling with the same problem.
For this example I have used the following app setting in a console application:
<appSettings>
<add key="EnvironmentVariableExample" value="%BaseDir%\bin"/>
<add key="StaticClassExample" value="bin"/>
<add key="InterpollationExample" value="{0}bin"/>
</appSettings>
1. Use environment variables
I believe autocro autocro's answer touched on it. I'm just doing an implementation that should suffice when building or debugging without having to close visual studio. I have used this solution back in the day...
Create a pre-build event that will use the MSBuild variables
Warning: Use a variable that will not be replaced easily so use your project name or something similar as a variable name.
SETX BaseDir "$(ProjectDir)"
Reset variables; using something like the following:
Refresh Environment Variables on Stack Overflow
Use the setting in your code:
'
private void Test_Environment_Variables()
{
string BaseDir = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["EnvironmentVariableExample"];
string ExpandedPath = Environment.ExpandEnvironmentVariables(BaseDir).Replace("\"", ""); //The function addes a " at the end of the variable
Console.WriteLine($"From within the C# Console Application {ExpandedPath}");
}
'
2. Use string interpolation:
Use the string.Format() function
`
private void Test_Interpollation()
{
string ConfigPath = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["InterpollationExample"];
string SolutionPath = Path.GetFullPath(Path.Combine(System.AppDomain.CurrentDomain.BaseDirectory, #"..\..\"));
string ExpandedPath = string.Format(ConfigPath, SolutionPath.ToString());
Console.WriteLine($"Using old interpollation {ExpandedPath}");
}
`
3. Using a static class, This is the solution I mostly use.
The implementation
`
private void Test_Static_Class()
{
Console.WriteLine($"Using a static config class {Configuration.BinPath}");
}
`
The static class
`
static class Configuration
{
public static string BinPath
{
get
{
string ConfigPath = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["StaticClassExample"];
string SolutionPath = Path.GetFullPath(Path.Combine(System.AppDomain.CurrentDomain.BaseDirectory, #"..\..\"));
return SolutionPath + ConfigPath;
}
}
}
`
Project Code:
App.config:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<configuration>
<startup>
<supportedRuntime version="v4.0" sku=".NETFramework,Version=v4.6.1" />
</startup>
<appSettings>
<add key="EnvironmentVariableExample" value="%BaseDir%\bin"/>
<add key="StaticClassExample" value="bin"/>
<add key="InterpollationExample" value="{0}bin"/>
</appSettings>
</configuration>
Program.cs
using System;
using System.Configuration;
using System.IO;
namespace ConfigInterpollation
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
new Console_Tests().Run_Tests();
Console.WriteLine("Press enter to exit");
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
internal class Console_Tests
{
public void Run_Tests()
{
Test_Environment_Variables();
Test_Interpollation();
Test_Static_Class();
}
private void Test_Environment_Variables()
{
string ConfigPath = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["EnvironmentVariableExample"];
string ExpandedPath = Environment.ExpandEnvironmentVariables(ConfigPath).Replace("\"", "");
Console.WriteLine($"Using environment variables {ExpandedPath}");
}
private void Test_Interpollation()
{
string ConfigPath = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["InterpollationExample"];
string SolutionPath = Path.GetFullPath(Path.Combine(System.AppDomain.CurrentDomain.BaseDirectory, #"..\..\"));
string ExpandedPath = string.Format(ConfigPath, SolutionPath.ToString());
Console.WriteLine($"Using interpollation {ExpandedPath}");
}
private void Test_Static_Class()
{
Console.WriteLine($"Using a static config class {Configuration.BinPath}");
}
}
static class Configuration
{
public static string BinPath
{
get
{
string ConfigPath = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["StaticClassExample"];
string SolutionPath = Path.GetFullPath(Path.Combine(System.AppDomain.CurrentDomain.BaseDirectory, #"..\..\"));
return SolutionPath + ConfigPath;
}
}
}
}
Pre-build event:
Project Settings -> Build Events