vote up 0 vote down star

I am looking to integrate ELMAH into an existing ASP.NET application to further support error investigations and could use some help with the connection strings. We use a single web.config file for all or our environments the application is deployed in, and at runtime, the app decides which environment it is in, typically based on URL.

This is what a standard block would like like for us...

  <connectionStrings>
    <add name="TESTAppDB" connectionString="Data Source=SQL-T-APPNAME.COMPANY.COM;Initial Catalog=APPNAME;User ID=USER;Password=THEPASS" providerName="System.Data.SqlClient"/>
    <add name="CERTAppDB" connectionString="Data Source=SQL-C-APPNAME.COMPANY.COM;Initial Catalog=APPNAME;User ID=USER;Password=THEPASS" providerName="System.Data.SqlClient"/>
    <add name="PRODAppDB" connectionString="Data Source=SQL-P-APPNAME.COMPANY.COM;Initial Catalog=APPNAME;User ID=USER;Password=THEPASS" providerName="System.Data.SqlClient"/>
  </connectionStrings>

With Elmah, it appears that you just need to specify the name of the connection string, but how can I do this dynamically at runtime? For example, if I'm test, then I want this:

<elmah>
     <errorLog type="Elmah.SqlErrorLog, Elmah" connectionStringName="TESTAppDB"/>
</elmah>

but if I'm in PROD:

<elmah>
     <errorLog type="Elmah.SqlErrorLog, Elmah" connectionStringName="PRODAppDB"/>
</elmah>

EDIT
The deployment practices for web applications are well out of scope for what I am trying to do. I need a code solution that allows me to change the datasource for the ELMAH Sql Error Log...

I cannot change the way we deploy web apps today. That means, whatever is in TEST, moves to CERT. What is in CERT moves to PROD. The web app must be able to determine which environment it is in and run as such...

flag

3 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

Since Elmah is open-source it would be easy to add your own :-)

All you would need to do was to add a new static property to the SqlErrorLog class that would contain the connection string you wanted to use and then you would update the SqlErrorLog.ConnectionString property to return your custom connection string if it had a value.

Try to add something like this to the class (warning - untested code):

public static string CustomConnectionString { get; set; }

public virtual string ConnectionString
{
  get 
  { 
    if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(CustomConnectionString)) 
    {
      return _connectionString;
    }
    else
    {
      return CustomConnectionString; 
    }
  }
}

This should be enough. Now all you must do is to find the location where you select your connection string and update it to also set the SqlErrorLog.CustomConnectionString property.

link|flag
Good Call on the ability to grab the code. I'm setting the CustomConnectionString from the Global.asax Session_Start and its working like a charm! – RSolberg May 18 at 19:31
Thanks again for your help on this... Working great! – RSolberg Sep 12 at 17:46
vote up 0 vote down

I would use one connection string name "AppDB", but actually host the connection string in an external (outside of web.config file) config file, that is different in each environment.

In your web.config:

<connectionStrings configSource="config\connectionStrings.config"/>

Then, in the connectionStrings.config file:

<connectionStrings>    
    <add name="AppDB" connectionString="Data Source=SQL-T-APPNAME.COMPANY.COM;Initial Catalog=APPNAME;User ID=USER;Password=THEPASS" providerName="System.Data.SqlClient"/>
</connectionStrings>

Then, depending on what environment the connectionStrings.config file is in, modify the connectionString. In the code, just refer to "AppDB".

link|flag
Same rule applies. We must deploy the same files between all environments. Its not ideal, I know that, but not something I have control over. – RSolberg May 18 at 18:09
vote up 1 vote down

I use a Web Deployment Project for this. You can specify a file with the connection string in it for each Configuration (Debug and Release by default). This way all your config files for all deployments have the same files and your web.config is updated appropriately for each deployment.

Scott Gu has good info here: http://weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/2005/11/06/429723.aspx

It is for a previous release but the information still applies.

link|flag
1  
Seconded. I followed Scott's advice in a recent project of mine, and it works quite well! – Josh Hinman May 18 at 18:19
I'll add more info in the question, I knew it would turn into a deployment problem, but that is not what the issue is, or at least the issue I need solved. – RSolberg May 18 at 18:19

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.