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There are a bunch of contradictory statements about web.config and .NET Core.

Additionally, I've just deployed a mostly-fresh-out-of-the-box .NET Core app to Azure. In the repository, there's no web.config but when I explore the deployed code in Kudu, there IS a web.config file?


What's going on with web.config in .NET Core? How are you supposed to do non-Custom-App-Configuration stuff? (e.g. HTTP headers and other HTTP level config)

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In a .NET Framework Web application, web.config is used for two purposes:

  1. To store configuration for the web application.

  2. To store configuration for the IIS that hosts the application (system.webServer element).

In a .NET Core Web application, you have at least two choices for storing application configuration:

  • Use a .NET Core Configuration Provider, often with a json configuration file.

  • Use the System.Configuration.ConfigurationManager NuGet package with recent versions of .NET Core (2.0+ I think). One advantage of using System.Configuration.ConfigurationManager is that it can be used in .NET Standard 2.0 libraries that are compatible with both .NET Core and .NET Framework.

If you choose to use System.Configuration.ConfigurationManager in a .NET Core web application, you need to add an app.config (not web.config) file to your Visual Studio project. When you build this project it will be copied to the output directory and renamed as appName.dll.config.

If you are hosting your .NET Core web application in IIS, you can still need a web.config file with configuration for IIS (system.webServer element). I.e. your application may need both app.Config and web.config.

Personally I prefer to use System.Configuration.ConfigurationManager and an app.config XML configuration file, for several reasons including compatibility with .NET Framework, the fact that it's easy to comment out bits of XML, etc. YMMV of course.

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  • 2
    you deserved my up vote for this sentence "you need to add an app.config (not web.config)" May 28, 2021 at 17:32
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Read a few web.config examples from Google and you should notice that,

  1. ASP.NET/WCF 2.x/4.x uses it to store configuration (tags like <system.web>).
  2. IIS uses it to store configuration (tags like <system.webServer>).

So migrating to ASP.NET Core only make the first obsolete, and you should only say goodbye to that piece of knowledge.

If you host your web app on IIS, then web.config is still needed, as you need initial settings there to configure ASP.NET Core module for IIS/IIS Express (dotnet publish generates such a file if you don't have your own).

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  • This answer is a bright light in a sea of misinfo. A web.config is truly still needed for hosting on IIS. You can also control URL rewriting and redirecting in a web.config outside the application if you choose to do so. Nov 28, 2023 at 2:00

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