4

I'm trying to setting up environment configuration for my .Net-core 2 application. I have 2 appSettings config.

appSettings.json

"ConnectionStrings": {
  "DefaultConnection": "Server=staging.com;Database=staging;User Id=staging;Password=pwd"
}

appsettings.development.json

"ConnectionStrings": {
  "DefaultConnection": "Server=localhost;Database=staging;User Id=local;Password=pwd"
}

In my Startup.cs I have my configuration set like so:

public Startup(IHostingEnvironment env)
{
    var builder = new ConfigurationBuilder()
        .SetBasePath(env.ContentRootPath)
        .AddJsonFile("appsettings.json", optional: false, reloadOnChange: true)
        .AddJsonFile($"appsettings.{env.EnvironmentName}.json", optional: true)
        .AddEnvironmentVariables();
    Configuration = builder.Build();
}

When I go to grab out the connection string.

var connectionString = Configuration.GetConnectionString("DefaultConnection");

This is returning the one in appsettings.json instead of the appsettings.development.json Yet when I check if this is the development environment env.IsDevelopment() it returns true.

How can I grab the proper connection string from my configuration?

2
  • Where do you store the staging configurtion? Into appstettings.staging.json or appsettings.json ? Jun 10, 2018 at 5:12
  • Staging is in app setting, localhost is in development, I’m expecting localhost but I’m getting staging
    – johnny 5
    Jun 10, 2018 at 5:14

1 Answer 1

3

This is returning the staging one instead of the development. Yet when I check if this is the development environment env.IsDevelopment() it returns true.

You are getting the developement configuration because you're still in development environment that is why env.IsDevelopment() returns true.

To tell ASP.Net Core that you're in a Staging environment you need to configure that through your project property and set environment property.

Go to Debug tab, then make sure that Environment variables section has ASPNETCORE_ENVIRONMENT set to Staging like below:

enter image description here

By doing that env.IsDevelopment() will return false and env.IsStaging() will return true. So appsettings.development.json will not be included to your configuration.

Because there is no appsettings.staging.json, then you will get appseting.json settings then the DefaultConnection you're looking for.

Side note : you should create a separate file appsettings.staging.json for Staging envrionment because appseting.json should contain only common configurations for all environments. Each environement appsettings.[environment].json should add new settings or override the common settings.

Side note : make sure the paths for the ConnectionStrings section is at the root level

5
  • 1
    I’m pretty sure this solves it, I will confirm in the morning. I think I need to separate out my configurations
    – johnny 5
    Jun 10, 2018 at 5:34
  • Yep it is the best practice to separate per environment. Jun 10, 2018 at 5:34
  • thanks, It turns out, this was Connection strings was nested deeper than it should be and it couldn't find it.
    – johnny 5
    Jun 10, 2018 at 14:09
  • Hum... Your configuration in your question is correct so we didn't see that issue :) Jun 10, 2018 at 14:13
  • 1
    yeah, this solved the issue because I found it when I moved everything to appsettings.staging.json, but i figured I'd also document my mistake incase someone else came here and still cant figure it out why
    – johnny 5
    Jun 10, 2018 at 14:16

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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