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ASP.NET MVC - Routing - an action with file extension

is there a way to achieve calling URL http://mywebsite/myarea/mycontroller/myaction.xml This would basically "fake" requesting a file but the result would be an action operation that would serve a file created dynamically?

I tried this:

context.MapRoute(                 "Xml_filename",                 "Xml/{controller}/{action}.xml"             ); 

but whenever there is a filextension in the URL the routing fails and behaves as I was requesting a file directly.

I suspect this might be because of using extension less url handler.

<add name="ExtensionlessUrlHandler-ISAPI-4.0_32bit" path="*." verb="GET,HEAD,POST,DEBUG,PUT,DELETE,PATCH,OPTIONS" modules="IsapiModule" scriptProcessor="%windir%\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v4.0.30319\aspnet_isapi.dll" preCondition="classicMode,runtimeVersionv4.0,bitness32" responseBufferLimit="0" />         <add name="ExtensionlessUrlHandler-ISAPI-4.0_64bit" path="*." verb="GET,HEAD,POST,DEBUG,PUT,DELETE,PATCH,OPTIONS" modules="IsapiModule" scriptProcessor="%windir%\Microsoft.NET\Framework64\v4.0.30319\aspnet_isapi.dll" preCondition="classicMode,runtimeVersionv4.0,bitness64" responseBufferLimit="0" />         <add name="ExtensionlessUrlHandler-Integrated-4.0" path="*." verb="GET,HEAD,POST,DEBUG,PUT,DELETE,PATCH,OPTIONS" type="System.Web.Handlers.TransferRequestHandler" preCondition="integratedMode,runtimeVersionv4.0" /> 

Thank you for any suggestions.

Jakub

like image 551
Jakub Holovsky Avatar asked Mar 03 '14 23:03

Jakub Holovsky


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2 Answers

You need to map requests for your XML files to TransferRequestHandler in web.config. Otherwise IIS will handle the request.

Jon Galloway explains how to do this here.

In summary, you add this element to location/system.webServer/handlers in your web.config:

<add name="XmlFileHandler" path="*.xml" verb="GET" type="System.Web.Handlers.TransferRequestHandler" preCondition="integratedMode,runtimeVersionv4.0" /> 
like image 63
Ben Foster Avatar answered Sep 21 '22 17:09

Ben Foster


The problem is that IIS will handle the .xml file as a static file and will by default not route the XML file through your MVC application. IIS handles the request and your MVC code never gets a change to route to this file. There are a few ways around this.

I've found the easiest way to handle this by using the IIS Rewrite module to rewrite the URL from static file URL(s) to an MVC route:

<system.webServer>   <rewrite>     <rules>       <rule name="Live Writer Manifest">         <match url="*.xml"/>         <action type="Rewrite" url="route/xmlfilehandler"/>       </rule>     </rules>   </rewrite> </system.webServer> 

Make sure you have the IIS Rewrite Module installed (separate install from the Platform Installer). If you already are using the Rewrite handler this is the most efficient solution.

As pointed out above by Ben Foster and Jon Galloway's post, you can also map the TransferRequestHandler at your specific path you want to route. For compactness here's what you need to add to your web.config:

<system.webServer>   <handlers>      <add name="Windows Live Writer Xml File Handler"        path="wlwmanfest.xml"        verb="GET" type="System.Web.Handlers.TransferRequestHandler"        preCondition="integratedMode,runtimeVersionv4.0" responseBufferLimit="0"       />   </handlers> </system.webServer> 

You can then use an Attribute Route to handle .xml file Urls. For example:

[Route("blog/wlwmanifest.xml")] public ActionResult LiveWriterManifest() {... } 

More info in this blog post: http://weblog.west-wind.com/posts/2015/Nov/13/Serving-URLs-with-File-Extensions-in-an-ASPNET-MVC-Application

like image 26
Rick Strahl Avatar answered Sep 19 '22 17:09

Rick Strahl