.NET Core C#
.NET Core C#
Azure Storage Blob Simple Upload
See more Azure Cloud Storage Examples
Demonstrates the simplest possible upload to Azure Storage. The contents of a string variable are uploaded to a blob file in Azure Cloud Storage.Chilkat .NET Core C# Downloads
bool success = false;
// This example requires the Chilkat API to have been previously unlocked.
// See Global Unlock Sample for sample code.
Chilkat.Rest rest = new Chilkat.Rest();
// Connect to the Azure Storage Blob Service
bool bTls = true;
int port = 443;
bool bAutoReconnect = true;
// In this example, the storage account name is "chilkat".
success = rest.Connect("chilkat.blob.core.windows.net",port,bTls,bAutoReconnect);
if (success != true) {
Debug.WriteLine(rest.LastErrorText);
return;
}
// Provide Azure Cloud credentials for the REST call.
Chilkat.AuthAzureStorage azAuth = new Chilkat.AuthAzureStorage();
azAuth.AccessKey = "AZURE_ACCESS_KEY";
// The account name used here should match the 1st part of the domain passed in the call to Connect (above).
azAuth.Account = "chilkat";
azAuth.Scheme = "SharedKey";
azAuth.Service = "Blob";
// This causes the "x-ms-version: 2021-08-06" header to be automatically added.
azAuth.XMsVersion = "2021-08-06";
success = rest.SetAuthAzureStorage(azAuth);
// Set some request headers.
success = rest.AddHeader("x-ms-blob-content-disposition","attachment; filename=\"helloWorld.txt\"");
success = rest.AddHeader("x-ms-blob-type","BlockBlob");
success = rest.AddHeader("x-ms-meta-m1","v1");
success = rest.AddHeader("x-ms-meta-m2","v2");
// Note: The application does not need to explicitly set the following
// headers: x-ms-date, Authorization, and Content-Length. These headers
// are automatically set by Chilkat.
// Upload the string "Hello World!" to the file named "helloWorld.txt" located in the container named "test".
string responseStr = rest.FullRequestString("PUT","/test/helloWorld.txt","Hello World!");
if (rest.LastMethodSuccess != true) {
Debug.WriteLine(rest.LastErrorText);
return;
}
// When successful, the Azure Storage service will respond with a 201 response code,
// with an empty body. Therefore, in the success condition, the responseStr is empty.
if (rest.ResponseStatusCode == 201) {
Debug.WriteLine("File uploaded.");
}
else {
// Examine the request/response to see what happened.
Debug.WriteLine("response status code = " + Convert.ToString(rest.ResponseStatusCode));
Debug.WriteLine("response status text = " + rest.ResponseStatusText);
Debug.WriteLine("response header: " + rest.ResponseHeader);
Debug.WriteLine("response body (if any): " + responseStr);
Debug.WriteLine("---");
Debug.WriteLine("LastRequestStartLine: " + rest.LastRequestStartLine);
Debug.WriteLine("LastRequestHeader: " + rest.LastRequestHeader);
}