The 10-Day .Net Aspire Challenge – Day 7: Azure Blob Storage

Step-by-step guide on how to use the .Net Aspire Azure Blob Storage component in Visual Studio.

Introduction

.Net Aspire framework is used to develop cloud and production-ready distributed applications. It consists of components to handle cloud-native concerns such as Redis, Postgres etc.

Prerequisites

Install .Net 8
Install Visual Studio 2022 version 17 or higher
.Net Aspire Workload
Container runtime such as Docker Desktop
10 Day .Net Aspire Challenge

Objectives

Learn how to create a starter project using .Net Aspire with the Redis Cache.

Github Sample: The solution structure is divided into the following projects

DotnetAspireChallenge.ApiService
DotnetAspireChallenge.AppHost
DotnetAspireChallenge.ServiceDefaults
DotnetAspireChallenge.Web

Getting Started

Step 1: Install the following NuGet package

Install the following Nuget package into the subsequent project “DotnetAspireChallenge.AppHost

dotnet add package Aspire.Azure.Storage.Blobs

In the above project, register the Azure storage, blobs and emulator.

var storage = builder.AddAzureStorage(“storage”);
var blobs = storage.AddBlobs(“blobs”);

if (builder.Environment.IsDevelopment())
{
storage.RunAsEmulator(c => c.WithImageTag(“3.31.0”));
}

**Note: ** The particular tag is used to skip version checks.

Step 2: Install another NuGet package

Install the following Nuget package into the subsequent project “DotnetAspireChallenge.ApiService

dotnet add package Aspire.Azure.Storage.Blobs

then register the context into the Program.cs file as follows

builder.AddAzureBlobClient(“blobs”);

Step 3: Create an extension class

Create an extension class and register a minimal API get method to demonstrate the BlobServiceClient usage in the API Service

public static class AspireAzureBlobExtension
{
public static void MapAzureBlobStorageEndpoint(this WebApplication app)
{
app.MapPost(“/create-images-container”, async (BlobServiceClient blobServiceClient) =>
{
string containerName = “images-container”;

try
{
BlobContainerClient container = await blobServiceClient.CreateBlobContainerAsync(containerName);

if (await container.ExistsAsync())
{
return Results.Ok(container);
}
}
catch (RequestFailedException e)
{
Console.WriteLine(“HTTP error code {0}: {1}”, e.Status, e.ErrorCode);
Console.WriteLine(e.Message);
return Results.Problem($”HTTP error code {e.Status}: {e.Message}”);
}

return Results.NotFound(“Container creation failed or it does not exist.”);
});
}
}

and finally, register in the Program.cs file

app.MapAzureBlobStorageEndpoint();

Step 4: Hit the POST endpoint

A sample POST request showcases the container is created successfully.


Add additional connection string properties using the JSON syntax

{
“Aspire”: {
“Azure”: {
“Storage”: {
“Blobs”: {
“DisableHealthChecks”: true,
“DisableTracing”: false,
“ClientOptions”: {
“Diagnostics”: {
“ApplicationId”: “myapp”
}
}
}
}
}
}
}

Congratulations..!! You’ve successfully integrated the Azure Blob Storage component into the .Net Aspire project.

Github Project

GitHub – ssukhpinder/DotnetAspireChallenge: 10 Day .Net Aspire Challenge

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