Reputation: 19375
I have a class library that contains a valid connectionString inside the app.config. Inside that class library I want to use it with
ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["NAME"].ConnectionString
My ASP.net 4.0 framework application references that DDL and retrieves data from it. I want create a Entity Framework 4 DataContext within my DDL with the ConnectionString from the App.config. (I do not want to pass the connectionString from my ASP.net application in every single method. (I'm using ObjectDataSources))
However, this line inside my DLL throws a NullReferenceException.
ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["NAME"].ConnectionString
How can I fix this issue?
Upvotes: 4
Views: 11620
Reputation: 4263
In case if you don't waana use ConfigurationManager
If i assume the config file is mydll.dll.config
i can load it as XElement
and parse it using Linq as
var xe = XElement.Load("mydll.dll.config");
var connectionString = xe.Descendants("connectionStrings")
.Elements("add")
.FirstOrDefault(a => a.Attribute("name").Value == Name)
.Attribute("connectionString").Value;
where Name
is the connectionString name in the XML. Without using the ConfigurationManager
import and other stuffs. The only requirement for this to make sure that the config file sit next to the dll.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1039498
I have a class library that contains a valid connectionString inside the app.config
A class library doesn't have an app.config file associated. It's the application consuming this assembly that does. So you need to put the connection string inside this config file (if this is an ASP.NET application this would be web.config
). Thus adding an App.config
file in a project of type class library in Visual Studio makes no sense.
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 630627
In this case you put the same <connectionStrings>
entry (the <add>
in question) in your web app's web.config
, ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings
always looks at the current config, that's a web.config in your case.
Upvotes: 3