8

In Visual Studio 2015 you set the following variable in project properties: ASPNET_ENV. If you set it to development then you can use:

public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, IHostingEnvironment env)
{
    if (env.IsDevelopment())
    {
        app.UseErrorPage();
    }
 }

IsDevelopment method will check ASPNET_ENV environment variable. Now this is all good on development while you are in Visual Studio 2015. When you publish the web application to IIS on a production server how can you set the value for ASPNET_ENV?

My server is Windows Server 2012

4

2 Answers 2

8

If you are using IIS to host your application, it's possible to set the environment variables in your web.configfile like this:

<aspNetCore processPath="%LAUNCHER_PATH%" arguments="%LAUNCHER_ARGS%" stdoutLogEnabled="false" stdoutLogFile=".\logs\stdout" forwardWindowsAuthToken="false">
    <environmentVariables>
        <environmentVariable name="ASPNETCORE_ENVIRONMENT" value="QA" />
        <environmentVariable name="AnotherVariable" value="My Value" />
    </environmentVariables>
</aspNetCore>
1
  • 1
    Please correct the indentation in your markdown so the closing tag (</aspNetCore>) is included as code, and the environmentVariables subsection is nicely indented. I would have done it myself but it doesn't count as sufficient characters to allow the edit.
    – Eric Lease
    Nov 23, 2016 at 20:41
8

This is how to set the environment variable on Windows:

  1. On your server, right click 'Computer' or 'My Computer' and click on 'Properties'.
  2. Go to 'Advanced System Settings'.
  3. Click on 'Environment Variables' in the Advanced tab.
  4. Add a new System Variable with the name ASPNET_ENV (RC1) or ASPNETCORE_ENVIRONMENT (RC2, RTM and Above) and a value of Production, Staging, Development or whatever you want.
  5. A reboot of your site may be required.

See also this answer for how to read the environment variable from gulpfile.js.

6

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.