I am using a free MS Azure virtual webserver for my site.
On my dev machine I can successfully create a CSV file, save it to a relative temp directory, and then download it to the browser client.
However, when I run it from the Azure site, I get the following error:
System.IO.DirectoryNotFoundException: Could not find a part of the path 'D:\home\site\wwwroot\temp\somefile.csv'.
Does the free version of Azure Websites block us from saving files to disk? If not, where are we allowed to create/save files that we generate on the fly?
Code Example
private FilePathResult SaveVolunteersToCsvFile(List<Volunteer> volunteers)
{
string virtualPathToDirectory = "~/temp";
string physicalPathToDirectory = Server.MapPath(virtualPathToDirectory);
string fileName = "Volunteers.csv";
string pathToFile = Path.Combine(physicalPathToDirectory, fileName);
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
// Column Headers
sb.AppendLine("First Name,Last Name,Phone,Email,Approved,Has Background Check");
// CSV Rows
foreach (var volunteer in volunteers)
{
sb.AppendLine(string.Format("{0},{1},{2},{3},{4},{5},{6}",
volunteer.FirstName, volunteer.LastName, volunteer.MobilePhone.FormatPhoneNumber(), volunteer.EmailAddress, volunteer.IsApproved, volunteer.HasBackgroundCheckOnFile));
}
using (StreamWriter outfile = new StreamWriter(pathToFile))
{
outfile.Write(sb.ToString());
}
return File(Server.MapPath(virtualPathToDirectory + "/" + fileName), "text/csv", fileName);
}
Make sure that the ~/temp
folder gets published to the server, as it's possible your publish process isn't including it.
Azure Websites provide environment variables that you can use to get to things like a temporary storage folder. For example, there is a "TEMP" variable you could access to get a path to the TEMP folder specific to your Website.
Change line 2 in your method to this:
//string physicalPathToDirectory = Server.MapPath(virtualPathToDirectory);
string physicalPathToDirectory = Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("TEMP");
Then change the last line to this:
//return File(Server.MapPath(virtualPathToDirectory + "/" + fileName), "text/csv", fileName);
return File(pathToFile, "text/csv", fileName);
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