If you do not need any specific functionality then IIS serves images from the file system just fine. You can even configure ASP.NET based authentication on top of it and restrict the access based on roles.
If you do need a specific functionality (say add watermark or get the images from a database) then what you need to use is an HttpHandler. This is basically a class that processes an HTTP request via a method called ProcessRequest. In this method you write the appropriate code to get the image, manipulate it if you need to and use the Response object to write the bytes to the client. If you need high scalability it is advisable to use asynchronous HttpHandler.
Here is a complete handler we use in a real world project for serving images from the database with caching support. I am pretty sure it is not perfect and universal but it works for us.
using OurProject.Models.Entities;
using System;
using System.Data.Entity;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using System.Web;
namespace OurProject
{
public class PhotoHandler : HttpTaskAsyncHandler
{
private const double CacheDateEpsilonSeconds = 1;
public override bool IsReusable
{
get
{
//the handler does not store any state so the object can be reused
return true;
}
}
public override async Task ProcessRequestAsync(HttpContext context)
{
//get the id of the photo object
int photoID;
if (!Int32.TryParse(context.Request.QueryString["ID"], out photoID))
{
context.Response.StatusCode = 400;
return;
}
var dataContext = new DataContext();
//retrieve the object metadata from the database. Not that the call is async so it does not block the thread while waiting for the database to respond
PhotoInfo photoInfo = await dataContext.PhotoInfos.SingleOrDefaultAsync(pi => pi.BusinessCardID == photoID);
//if the object is not found return the appropriate status code
if (photoInfo == null)
{
context.Response.StatusCode = 404;
return;
}
DateTime clientLastModified;
//check if the image has been modified since it was last served
//if not return 304 status code
if (DateTime.TryParse(context.Request.Headers["If-Modified-Since"], out clientLastModified) &&
clientLastModified.AddSeconds(CacheDateEpsilonSeconds) >= photoInfo.LastModifiedDate)
{
context.Response.StatusCode = 304;
context.Response.StatusDescription = "Not Modified";
return;
}
//set various cache options
context.Response.Cache.SetCacheability(HttpCacheability.Private);
context.Response.Cache.VaryByParams["d"] = true;
context.Response.Cache.SetLastModified(photoInfo.LastModifiedDate);
context.Response.Cache.SetMaxAge(new TimeSpan(365, 0, 0, 0));
context.Response.Cache.SetOmitVaryStar(true);
context.Response.Cache.SetExpires(DateTime.UtcNow.AddDays(365));
context.Response.Cache.SetValidUntilExpires(true);
//Get the actual file data. Again note the async IO call
PhotoFile file = await dataContext.PhotoFiles.SingleAsync(pf => pf.BusinessCardID == photoID);
//serve the image with the appropriate MIME type. In this case the MIME type is determined when saving in the database
context.Response.ContentType = photoInfo.MimeType;
context.Response.BinaryWrite(file.PhotoData);
}
}
}