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Read custom settings from local.settings.json in Azure functions

I am trying to retrieve a custom setting from local.settings.json file. Example I am trying to read tables list present in the below local.settings.json file

{
  "IsEncrypted": false,
  "Values": {
    "AzureWebJobsStorage": "UseDevelopmentStorage=true",
    "AzureWebJobsDashboard": "UseDevelopmentStorage=true",
    "TableList": "TestTableName1,TestTableName2"
  }
}

Using the following code am reading it

string tableslist = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["TableList"];

and it works, but I've read in a few places that this works only when debugging locally, it might not work after it is deployed, in production environment. Could someone point me how to do this in the right way? Or the problem is only applicable to the connection string related settings?

like image 295
Pரதீப் Avatar asked Aug 10 '18 07:08

Pரதீப்


People also ask

How do I read app settings from Azure in .NET core?

After deploying, click on the go-to-resources. In the left side menu, click on the search box & search for configuration, click on the configuration & click on "New Application Settings", add pair of key-value which we used in our appsettings. json. Click on "save", it might take 5-10 secs to deploy the changes.

What is AzureWebJobsStorage used for?

AzureWebJobsStorage. The Azure Functions runtime uses this storage account connection string for normal operation. Some uses of this storage account include key management, timer trigger management, and Event Hubs checkpoints. The storage account must be a general-purpose one that supports blobs, queues, and tables.


3 Answers

@Kirk and @Slava have helped you get rid of confusion. Just add some details for you to refer.

By default, publication neither upload local.settings.json to Azure, nor makes modification on Application settings based on that local file, hence we need to update them manually on Azure portal. We can also do that on VS publish panel.(Create profile first if we need to change settings before publish.)

enter image description here

About how to get parameters in app settings, one thing to note is that ConfigurationManager is no long supported in v2 function(runtime beta), may only get null or exception with it. For v1 function(runtime ~1), it still works.

  1. For v1 function

    To read Application settings on Azure(also Values in local.settings.json), System.Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable($"{parameterName}") is recommended.

    Turn to Connection strings, unfortunately GetEnvironmentVariable only works on Azure because Connection strings(ConnectionStrings in local.settings.json) are not imported into Environment Variables. So we need ConfigurationManager, which works in both Azure and local env. Of course it can read Application settings as well.

  2. For v2 function, two choices for both Application settings and Connection strings.

    One is to use GetEnvironmentVariable. We can refer to this list for Prefixes of Connection String on Azure.

    // Get Application settings
    var appParameter= "AzureWebJobsStorage";
    System.Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable($"{appParameter}");
    
    // Get Connection strings(put local and Azure env together)
    var connParameter= "MySqlAzureConnection";
    var Prefix = "SQLAZURECONNSTR_";
    var connectionString = System.Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable($"ConnectionStrings:{connParameter}");
    if(string.IsNullOrEmpty(connectionString )){
       connectionString = System.Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable($"{Prefix}{connParameter}");
    }
    

    Another one is to use ConfigurationBuilder. Add ExecutionContext parameter, which is used to locate function app directory.

    [FunctionName("FunctionName")]
    public static void Run(...,ExecutionContext context)
    {
       //"Values" and "Connection" sections are injected into EnvironmentVariables automatically hence we don't need to load Json file again. 
       //Hence SetBasePath and AddJsonFile are only necessary if you have some custom settings(e.g. nested Json rather than key-value pairs) outside those two sections. It's recommended to put those setting to another file if we need to publish them.
       //Note that Function binding settings(e.g. Storage Connection String) must be EnvironmentVariables, i.e. must be stored in "Values" section.
        var config = new ConfigurationBuilder()
            .SetBasePath(context.FunctionAppDirectory)
            .AddJsonFile("local.settings.json", optional: true, reloadOnChange: true)
            .AddEnvironmentVariables()
            .Build();
    
        // Get Application Settings
        var appParameter= "AzureWebJobsStorage";
        string appsetting = config[$"{appParameter}"];
    
        // Get Connection strings
        var connParameter= "MySqlAzureConnection";
        string connectionString = config.GetConnectionString($"{connParameter}");
    }
    
like image 117
Jerry Liu Avatar answered Oct 08 '22 02:10

Jerry Liu


When using Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable in an .Net Core Azure Function I had to add the EnvironmentVariableTarget.Process parameter to retrieve the connection string

 string connectionString= Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("DBConnectionString", 
 EnvironmentVariableTarget.Process);

My local.settings.json looked something like this:

 {"IsEncrypted": false,
 "Values": {
"AzureWebJobsStorage": "UseDevelopmentStorage=true",
"DBConnectionString": "<conn string here>"
 }
}
like image 2
Joe Gurria Celimendiz Avatar answered Oct 08 '22 01:10

Joe Gurria Celimendiz


For those who are trying to use the EnvironmentVariable in the Functions Startup, And find the Environment null, You can check this code:

using System.IO;
using System.Net;
using System.Net.Mail;
using Microsoft.Azure.Functions.Extensions.DependencyInjection;
using Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration;
using Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection;
using Microsoft.Extensions.FileProviders;

[assembly: FunctionsStartup(typeof(Startup))]
namespace Company.Domain.Project;

internal class Startup : FunctionsStartup
{
    public override void Configure(IFunctionsHostBuilder builder)
    {
        var configBuilder = new ConfigurationBuilder()
            .AddEnvironmentVariables();
        
        IConfiguration configuration = configBuilder.Build();
        builder.Services.AddSingleton(configuration);
    }
}


after that you can use IConfiguration.GetValue<TType>("key"); in your startup and configuration.

The full described guidance can be found here:

quickstart azure functions - Microsoft Documentation

like image 2
MRebati Avatar answered Oct 08 '22 02:10

MRebati