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Web File Manager

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9 Jan 2005 3  
A single page ASP.NET file management utility.

Sample Image - WebFileManager.gif

Introduction

I often deploy ASP.NET websites to servers that I don't control. In these situations, I can't get to the underlying file system to do any file maintenance, because I don't have direct access to the server. So I have to access the file system indirectly, through the website that I am deploying. Rather than writing a bunch of special purpose pages to deal with file management, I developed a generic WebFileManager page than can be dropped into any ASP.NET website. This page performs the most common file and folder operations:

  • Uploading
  • Deleting
  • Renaming
  • Copying
  • Zipping
  • Moving

Adding WebFileManager to an existing ASP.NET project is relatively straightforward. It can be done in one of two ways:

Deployment as Inline Code

The first method, and I think the easiest, is to deploy the inline code version of WebFileManager: default-inline.aspx. Make a copy of this file and rename it default.aspx. Copy the WebFileManager folder to your web server. This folder only needs the following files:

  • \WebFileManager\default.aspx (renamed from default-inline.aspx)
  • \WebFileManager\images\file\*.gif
  • \WebFileManager\images\icon\*.gif

And you're done! The main advantage of this approach is that it doesn't require any changes to Web.config and thus doesn't force the app to restart. The downside is that the inline version of the page must be converted from the code-behind master; inline pages are a pain to debug and maintain.

Deployment as Code-Behind

If you're more comfortable with a typical code-behind page, that can also be deployed relatively easily: default.aspx is the master, code-behind version of WebFileManager.

  1. Copy the WebFileManager folder to your web server. This folder only needs the following files:
    • \WebFileManager\default.aspx
    • \WebFileManager\bin\WebFileManager.dll
    • \WebFileManager\images\file\*.gif
    • \WebFileManager\images\icon\*.gif
  2. Because code-behind generates a separate assembly DLL, you have to let the main webapp know where to find this file. Modify Web.config as follows:
    <runtime>
      <assemblyBinding xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1">
        <probing 
         privatePath="http://www.codeproject.com/useritems/WebFileManager/bin" />
      </assemblyBinding>
    </runtime>
  3. The page should now load using all default settings. If you want to override the defaults, see the configuration table later in this article for additional Web.config keys.

Whichever method of deployment you use, the new ZIP functionality requires ICSharpCode.SharpZipLib.dll to be present somewhere. I find that most of my web projects have this dependency already, but your mileage may vary. If you don't want this dependency, you'll need to comment out the ZIP code in the source. It's all in one function, so it isn't hard to remove.

Things to watch out for

Bear in mind that file system operations will occur as the ASP.NET process account by default (machinename\ASPNET), not as the user accessing the page! Any permission errors during a file operation will be trapped and echoed at the top of the page. So if you're wondering "Why can't I upload a file?" or "Why can't I delete that annoying folder?", it's typically because the ASPNET account doesn't have enough filesystem permissions to do so.

It's not included in the sample project, but there are a couple of reasons why you may also want to create a custom, local \WebFileManager\Web.config file:

  • If you want file operations to occur as a specific user: enable impersonation.
  • If you want to restrict access: set authorization.

Don't forget that web.config settings work fine on a per-folder basis, which is ideal for this purpose-- you can grant access to only a few users, or have the entire page run as administrator, without affecting the rest of the website.

Implementation

I'll warn you up front: this page is not a model of proper ASP.NET design. It uses Response.Write extensively, and does not use a single server control. I kept it deliberately old school, because I wanted a minimal amount of code and tight control of the HTML produced. I don't recommend this approach for a larger project, but I think it's OK for a single utility page.

As for the code, there is a handful of static HTML in default.aspx, and an associated code-behind class. The static HTML contains some JavaScript and a basic stylesheet, as well as the HTML page template. The page body, however, is rendered by the WriteTable method.

The main loop is very straightforward: it iterates through every directory and file in the current directory, and copies that to a simple DataTable structure, which is then sorted into a DataView and dumped to the output buffer in a simplified table format. The table is designed to render progressively using the "table-layout:fixed" style attribute:

With Response
  .Write("<TR>")
  .Write("<TD align=right><INPUT name=""")
  .Write(_strCheckboxTag)
  .Write(strFileName)
  .Write(""" type=checkbox>")
  .Write("<TD align=center><IMG src=""")
  .Write(FileIconLookup(drv))
  .Write(""" ")
  .Write(_strIconSize)
  .Write(">")
  .Write("<TD>")
  .Write(strFileLink)
  .Write("<TD align=right>")
  If blnFolder Then
    .Write("<TD align=left>")
  Else
    .Write(FormatKB(Convert.ToInt64(drv.Item("Size"))))
    .Write("<TD align=left>kb")
  End If
  .Write("<TD align=right>")
  .Write(Convert.ToString(drv.Item("Created")))
  .Write("<TD align=right>")
  .Write(Convert.ToString(drv.Item("Modified")))
  .Write("<TD align=right>")
  .Write(Convert.ToString(drv.Item("Attr")))
  .Write(Environment.NewLine)
End With
Flush()

File and folder operations are triggered by the checkboxes next to each row and a hidden form field with an action string. The JavaScript functions do some basic client-side error checking, set the action form field appropriately, and submit the form. On postback, the HandleAction method is called:

Public Sub HandleAction()
    If Request.Form(_strActionTag) Is Nothing Then Return

    Dim strAction As String = Request.Form(_strActionTag).ToLower
    If strAction = "" Then Return

    Select Case strAction
        Case "newfolder"
            MakeFolder(GetTargetPath)
        Case "upload"
            SaveUploadedFile()
        Case Else
            ProcessCheckedFiles(strAction)
    End Select
    If Not _FileOperationException Is Nothing Then
        WriteError(_FileOperationException)
    End If
End Sub

I am capturing any file operation failures into a class level variable _FileOperationException. If a file delete fails because the ASPNET process doesn't have access to it, we just want to display a simple message-- not throw a massive exception all the way up to the main application.

Configuration

This page does have a few configuration options it looks for in Web.config. These are all optional.

<add key="WebFileManager/ImagePath" 
        value= "resources/WebFileManager/images/" />
<add key="WebFileManager/HideFolderPattern" 
        value= "^bin|test" />
<add key="WebFileManager/HideFilePattern" 
        value= "scc$" />
<add key="WebFileManager/AllowedPathPattern" 
        value= "/MyWeb/Uploads/.*" />
<add key="WebFileManager/DefaultPath" 
        value= "~/MyWeb/Uploads" />
Property Default Description
ImagePath "images/" Root-relative path to the file/*.gif and icon/*.gif images used on the page.
HideFolderPattern "" Folder names matching this regular expression will not be displayed.
HideFilePattern "" File names matching this regular expression will not be displayed
AllowedPathPattern "" The user will only be allowed to navigate to paths that match this pattern.
DefaultPath "~/" Default path that will be displayed if no path is specified in the path= QueryString.
FlushContent False Issue a Response.Flush after writing each table row. Renders faster, but some HttpModules don't work with partial content.

Conclusion

WebFileManager is a simple page, but it has worked well for me in a number of projects. Hopefully, it'll work for you too.

There are many more details and comments in the demonstration solution provided at the top of the article, so check it out. And please don't hesitate to provide feedback, good or bad! I hope you enjoyed this article. If you did, you may also like my other articles as well.

History

  • Friday, November 26, 2004 - published
  • Wednesday, January 5, 2005 - Version 1.1
    • Added persistent up/down column sorting by clicking column headers
    • Default sort is now by name instead of "as returned by .NET functions"
    • Added ability to ZIP files using SharpZipLib
    • Improved FireFox support (FireFox doesn't support <COLGROUP> alignments?!)
    • Move and Copy now create destination folders if it doesn't exist.

License

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