Chapter 14. Reading and Writing Local Files
One of the (many) things HTML cannot do is read arbitrary files from the client’s machine or even create or delete such files. Rightfully so, you may say, since severe security precautions are involved. However, there are some scenarios where at least a limited read or write access is desirable. Imagine a Silverlight support application that allows users to upload error logs to the server that then processes this data. Or imagine a highly personalized, Silverlight-driven web portal that wants to save user settings on the client machine. In such cases, Silverlight provides two techniques that will help you implement a good solution for those scenarios. Just keep in mind that there are several security precautions in place. So as a user, don’t worry, but as a developer, be prepared to take a few extra things into consideration when implementing file access.
Accessing Local Files
For obvious security reasons, Silverlight does not allow
direct access to files on the client’s machine. However, in combination
with the OpenFileDialog
class, you can get read access
in the form of a FileStream
object. Users do have to
specifically grant access to files, and the only data the Silverlight
application receives is the data from the files, not any meta information.
In our sample application, we will allow users to select a video file from
their hard drives and grant Silverlight access to it; the video is then
shown as part of the application.
Let’s start ...
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