7

I have the following connection string declared in my app.config file:

  <connectionStrings>
    <add name="SqlConnectionString" connectionString="Data Source=xxx.xx.xx.xx;Initial Catalog=xxxxx;User Id=xx;Password=xxx;" providerName="System.Data.SqlClient" />
  </connectionStrings>

When I try to fetch this connection string using the following C# code snippet, I get the value null. I am not able to obtain the connection string. Is there anything wrong in the syntax?

First attempt:

var settings = ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["SqlConnectionString"];
string result = settings.ConnectionString;

Second attempt:

string result = ConfigurationSettings.AppSettings["SqlConnectionString"];
3
  • 2
    Are you sure there is a file deployed next to the assembly you're running that is called MyApp.exe.config, and that contains that connection string? Are you using NUnit? NUnit seems to need the app.config in a different spot than normal when running it from VS. If you're using an asp.net web project, you'll probably need your connection string in a web.config file, not an app.config file... Dec 23, 2011 at 5:37
  • The first syntax would be the correct one to fetch the value from the <connectionStrings> section. The second will definitely not work.
    – marc_s
    Dec 23, 2011 at 5:58
  • No its not a web project , its plane c# project
    – mahesh
    Dec 23, 2011 at 6:10

10 Answers 10

10

First, you must add the appSettings tag

 <connectionStrings>
    <appSettings>
      <add name="SqlConnectionString" connectionString="Data Source=xxx.xx.xx.xx;Initial Catalog=xxxxx;User Id=xx;Password=xxx;" providerName="System.Data.SqlClient" />
    </appSettings>
  </connectionStrings>

Second, add a reference to System.Configuration to your project and insert a using System.Configuration in the source.

Then, you can use ConfigurationManager.AppSettings to access your config setting:

string result = ConfigurationSettings.AppSettings["SqlConnectionString"];
3
  • This is the only way I could find to get the settings in a .Net 4.5 Console App
    – TChadwick
    May 22, 2013 at 18:11
  • 2
    I am trying this in Visual Studio 2008 and getting error that "ConnectionString has invalid child element "appSettings" Jan 28, 2014 at 2:56
  • 1
    Obsolete method.. Use ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["SqlConnectionString"] instead. Note: connection must be directly in appSettings section (not ideal for some reasons). Mar 9, 2016 at 11:36
6

For a non-web project, and with app.config set up as in the OP here's what I usually do, since the config file changes names when the app is compiled (to yourapp.exe.config):

    public static Configuration ExeConfig()
    {
        Assembly service = Assembly.GetAssembly(typeof(YourClass));
        return ConfigurationManager.OpenExeConfiguration(service.Location);
    }

Then to reference the s'th connection string:

ExeConfig().ConnectionStrings.ConnectionStrings[s].ConnectionString
2
  • Seems like you'd want this to be the name of the initial assembly if you had this in a library or something, and so then it seems that'd you'd want to use Assembly.GetEntryAssembly() Oct 25, 2012 at 20:56
  • You can use Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly() instead Assembly.GetAssembly(typeof(YourClass)) - YourClass is confusing (whitch class?). Mar 9, 2016 at 11:42
2

Am having the same problem but after much research, i discovered that the reason why the code is throwing a null reference exception is because if you use the connectionString name, it will return null and when you try to call a the ToString() or the ConnectionString property of the ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings property that's when the exception is thrown, so to
return the correct connection string, you have to index into the ConnectionStringSettings using the following code.

ConnectionStringSettings conSettings = ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings[/* index */];

string conString = conSettings.ConnectionString;
2

I am doing this to get my connect string "OracleDbContext"...

ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["OracleDbContext"].ConnectionString;

my web.config looks like:

  <connectionStrings>
    <add name="OracleDbContext" 
         providerName="Oracle.ManagedDataAccess.Client" 
         connectionString="User Id=oracle_user;              
                           Password=oracle_user_password;
                           Data Source=oracle" />
  </connectionStrings>
1

One thing I've noticed when compiling WinForm App in VS 2013:

I add connection strings my Settings File - which updates my app.config file

When I would expect:

var connectionString = ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["theConnectionStringName"].ConnectionString;

I have to write:

var connectionString = ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["MyAppNameSpace.Properties.Settings.theConnectionStringName"].ConnectionString;

Everything else is business as usual

0
<configuration>
  <appSettings>
   <add key="ConnectionString" value="blah blah blah"/>  </appSettings>
  </configuration>

Will the above configuration works with the API/code like:

string str = ConfigurationSettings.AppSettings["SqlConnectionString"];
0

The first syntax is definitely valid.

The possible cause is that the configuration file is not loaded properly in the application. I want to ensure what type of project it is. If it is a WinForm application or Console application, you need set the in the app.config. It will be compiled to .config and loaded when the application is launched. If it is a Web application, I'm afraid you cannot add the node to app.config, since it will not be loaded. You need to put it in the web.config. In addition, if you want to put the settings in the config file with a .net library (DLL), the configuration file will not be loaded anyway. The configuration file will only follow the main application.

1
  • How do you find out this error? If you are debugging the code in VS, please confirm that the <appName>.vshost.exe.config does exist. VS debug will use this configuration file.
    – Edward Zhu
    Dec 23, 2011 at 6:22
0

One other possible cause of failure could be incorrect name resolution by the .NET framework.

If the application name is longer than the 8.3 name (for instance GreatStuff.exe) it might get launched using its short 8.3 equivalent name (in my example GREATS~1.EXE) and .NET will then look for the app.config file by simply appending .config to the short name. And this will fail.

0

Same problem. Based on Merlyn Morgan-Graham and Edward Zhu comments, I rebuilt my project, which used the app.config to create a myapp.exe.config file with the connection string. Original first syntax then worked.

Other problem: Tried using the project properties dialog to modify the connection string and it added "project.My.Mysettings. to the connection string name. Which caused failure.

0

there is another way to do this for console app:

    <configuration>
  <appSettings>
    <add key="SqlConString" value="some connection string"/>
  </appSettings>

to read it

using System.Configuration;

and then use

string CONSTRING;
AppSettingsReader ap = new AppSettingsReader();
CONSTRING = ap.GetValue("SqlConString",typeof(string)).ToString();

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