There are two ways to communicate with Azure Blob Storage:
- .NET based API - this is the one, that you have used in regular .NET app - however this one cannot be used from within Silverlight application
- RESTfull HTTP API - this is the one that you might use directly from Silverlight
There is however no build-in library. You will have to write the HTTP requests on your own. That might be little complicated, and it will look something like this:
private void ListFiles()
{
var uri = String.Format("{0}{1}", _containerUrl, "?restype=container&comp=list&include=snapshots&include=metadata");
_webRequest = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequestCreator.ClientHttp.Create(new Uri(uri));
_webRequest.BeginGetResponse(EndListFiles, Guid.NewGuid().ToString());
}
private void EndListFiles(IAsyncResult result)
{
var doc = _webRequest.EndGetResponse(result);
var xDoc = XDocument.Load(doc.GetResponseStream());
var blobs = from blob in xDoc.Descendants("Blob")
select ConvertToUserFile(blob);
//do whatever you need here with the blobs.
}
Please note, that this supposes, that the container is public. If your container is not public, than you would have two options:
- Sign your HTTP request with the application key - that is generally bad ideas, while you are giving your access key to the silverlight applications (which might be distributed over the internet).
- Use Shared Access Signatures
You can read more about the options here.
Hope that helps.