unable to save settings in app.exe.config

不想你离开。 提交于 2019-12-03 13:54:46

According to the MSDN: ConfigurationManager.GetSection Method,

The ConfigurationManager.GetSection method accesses run-time configuration information that it cannot change. To change the configuration, you use the Configuration.GetSection method on the configuration file that you obtain by using one of the following Open methods:

However, if you want to update app.config file, I would read it as an xml document and manipulate it as a normal xml document.

Please see the following example: Note: this sample is just for proof-of-concept. Should not be used in production as it is.

using System;
using System.Linq;
using System.Xml.Linq;

namespace ChangeAppConfig
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            MyConfigSetting.CustomerName = "MyCustomer";
            MyConfigSetting.EmailAddress = "MyCustomer@Company.com";
            MyConfigSetting.TimeStamp = DateTime.Now;
            MyConfigSetting.Save();
        }
    }

    //Note: This is a proof-of-concept sample and 
    //should not be used in production as it is.  
    // For example, this is not thread-safe. 
    public class MyConfigSetting
    {
        private static string _CustomerName;
        public static string CustomerName
        {
            get { return _CustomerName; }
            set
            {
                _CustomerName = value;
            }
        }

        private static string _EmailAddress;
        public static string EmailAddress
        {
            get { return _EmailAddress; }
            set
            {
                _EmailAddress = value;
            }
        }

        private static DateTime _TimeStamp;
        public static DateTime TimeStamp
        {
            get { return _TimeStamp; }
            set
            {
                _TimeStamp = value;
            }
        }

        public static void Save()
        {
            XElement myAppConfigFile = XElement.Load(Utility.GetConfigFileName());
            var mySetting = (from p in myAppConfigFile.Elements("MySettings")
                            select p).FirstOrDefault();
            mySetting.Attribute("CustomerName").Value = CustomerName;
            mySetting.Attribute("EmailAddress").Value = EmailAddress;
            mySetting.Attribute("TimeStamp").Value = TimeStamp.ToString();

            myAppConfigFile.Save(Utility.GetConfigFileName());

        }
    }

    class Utility
    {        
        //Note: This is a proof-of-concept and very naive code. 
        //Shouldn't be used in production as it is. 
        //For example, no null reference checking, no file existence checking and etc. 
        public static string GetConfigFileName()
        {            
            const string STR_Vshostexe = ".vshost.exe";
            string appName = Environment.GetCommandLineArgs()[0];

            //In case this is running under debugger. 
            if (appName.EndsWith(STR_Vshostexe))
            {
                appName = appName.Remove(appName.LastIndexOf(STR_Vshostexe), STR_Vshostexe.Length) + ".exe";
            }

            return appName + ".config";
        }
    }
}

I also added "TimeStamp" attribute to MySettings in app.config to check the result easily.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<configuration>
  <configSections>
    <section name="MySettings" type="TestApp.MySettings, TestApp"/>
  </configSections>

  <MySettings CustomerName="" EmailAddress="" TimeStamp=""/>
</configuration> 

In many cases (in a restricted user scenario) the user do not have write access directly to the application config file. To come around this, you need to use the usersettings.

If you right-click your project and select the tab named "Settings", you can make a list of settings that are stored with the config file. If you select the "Scope" to be "User", the setting are automatically stored in the config file using a type that will automatically store the settings under the users AppData area, where the user allways has write access. The settings are also automatically provided as properties created in the Properties\Settings.Designer.cs code file, and are accessible in your code in Properties.Settings.Default .

Example:

Let's say you add a user setting called CustomerName:

On loading the app, you would want to retreive the value from the stored setting ( either default value as it is in the app config, or if it is stored for this user, the config file for the user):

string value = Properties.Settings.Default.CustomerName;

When you want to change the value, just write to it:

Properties.Settings.Default.CustomerName = "John Doe";

When you want to save all the settings, just call Save:

Properties.Settings.Default.Save();

Note that when you develop, the user file will occationally be reset to the default, but this only happens when building the app. When you just run the app, the settings you store will be read from the user-config file for the app.

If you still want to create your own handling of the settings, you can try this once, and look at what VisualStudio has automatically created for you to get an idea of what you need to get this working.

In order to actually update the config file, you'll need to call .Save() on the Configuration object - not just your config section object.

You should check out Jon Rista's three-part series on .NET 2.0 configuration up on CodeProject.

Highly recommended, well written and extremely helpful! It shows all the ins and outs of dealing with .NET 2.0 and up configuration, and helped me very much getting a grasp on the subject.

Marc

Be aware that the appname.vshost.exe.Config is reverted to it's the original state at the end of the debugging session. So you might be saving to the file (you can check by using Notepad during execution), then losing the saved contents when the debugging stops.

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