.Net Core revised configuration approach greatly.
You don't call ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["someSetting"]
anymore whenever you need value for some setting. Instead you load configuration on application startup with ConfigurationBuilder
. There could be multiple configuration sources (json or/and xml configuration file, environment variables, command line, Azure Key Vault, ...).
Then you build your configuration and pass strongly typed setting objects wrapped into IOption<T>
to consuming classes.
Here is a basic idea of how it works:
// Application boostrapping
ConfigurationBuilder configurationBuilder = new ConfigurationBuilder();
configurationBuilder.AddJsonFile("AppSettings.json");
var configuration = configurationBuilder.Build();
// IServiceCollection services
services.AddOptions();
services.Configure<SomeSettings>(configuration.GetSection("SomeSection"));
// Strongly typed settings
public class SomeSettings
{
public string SomeHost { get; set; }
public int SomePort { get; set; }
}
// Settings consumer
public class SomeClient : ISomeClient
{
public SomeClient(IOptions<SomeSettings> someSettings)
{
var host = someSettings.Value.SomeHost;
var port = someSettings.Value.SomePort;
}
}
// AppSettings.json
{
"SomeSection": {
"SomeHost": "localhost",
"SomePort": 25
}
}
For more details check article Configure an ASP.NET Core App.
I'm afraid that it will be difficult (trying to avoid word 'impossible') to maintain backward compatibility.