I have some complex data which is used for application configuration in xml format. I want to keep this xml string in web.config. Is it possible to add a big xml string in web.config and get it in code everywhere?
3 Answers
If you don't want to write a configuration section handler, you could just put your XML in a custom configuration section that is mapped to IgnoreSectionHandler
:
<configuration>
<configSections>
<section
name="myCustomElement"
type="System.Configuration.IgnoreSectionHandler"
allowLocation="false" />
</configSections>
...
<myCustomElement>
... complex XML ...
</myCustomElement>
...
</configuration>
You can then read it using any XML API, e.g. XmlDocument
, XDocument
, XmlReader
classes. E.g.:
XmlDocument doc = new XmlDocument();
doc.Load(AppDomain.CurrentDomain.SetupInformation.ConfigurationFile);
XmlElement node = doc.SelectSingleNode("/configuration/myCustomElement") as XmlElement;
... etc ...
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Will u plz tell how can I read the "...complex xml..." as a string in my code?– gmtekMar 13, 2012 at 4:29
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@Idorado, I added an example of reading the custom element using the XmlDocument class.– JoeMar 13, 2012 at 8:20
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2<section> describer must be put in <configuration><configSections> And <myCustomElement> in <applicationSettings>– BoogierJun 3, 2014 at 6:59
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1@Boogier, No need to put <myCustomElement> in applicationSettings, because, you can define your own Custom Element in the config file this way.– user1624372Jan 1, 2015 at 10:37
There are several ways of achieving what you want (an XML fragment that is globally and statically accessible to your application code):
The
web.config
is already an XML file. You can write a custom configuration section (as described here) in order to fetch the data from your custom XML.You can encode the XML data (all
<
to<
,>
to>
,&
to&
,"
to"e;
)You can put the XML data in a
<![CDATA[]]>
sectionDon't use
web.config
for this, but aSettings
file as @Yuck commented
That last option is the best one, in terms of ease of development and usage.
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Not an array, as far as I am aware, but you can add collections (there is a built in StringCollection, for example).– OdedMar 12, 2012 at 13:11
The configuration sections in web.config support long strings, but the string has to be a single line of text so they can fit into an attribute:
<add name="" value="... some very long text can go in here..." />
The string also can't contain quotes or line breaks or other XML markup characters. The data is basically XML and it has to be appropriately encoded.
For example, if you have XML like this:
<root>
<value>10</value>
</root>
it would have to be stored in a configuration value like this:
<add key="Value" value="<root>
 <value>10</value>
</root>" />
Which kind of defeats the purpose of a configuration element.
You might be better off storing the configuration value in a separate file on the file system and read it from there into a string or XmlDocument etc.
Settings
file? msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa730869(v=vs.80).aspxSettings
values are stored in web.config. TheSettings.settings
file is used by the designer.web.config
as a place to dump other XML simply because it's the same type is a poor excuse. There's already infrastructure for working with data in aSettings
file in a strongly-typed manner. See jrummell's comment.