To trust Azure Active Directory users on your application, you will need to create an app registration on Azure. Portal > Active Directory > App registrations > + New application registration Fill up the details of your app. The sign-on URL can be changed later so you can enter a local site
Update: Turns out that the Boot diagnostics failure that I’ve been getting below has got nothing to do with my Azure Virtual machine being stuck in the “Starting” state. If you arrived on this post because you have the same issue of a VM being stuck in “Starting” state, follow this post instead. Otherwise, keep reading
This one took me several days to configure as it seems like Google has been constantly upgrading its security rules and so I found a lot of solutions online that no longer work. It’s possible this article may get outdated soon but at the time of writing, this is what made my “Contact Us” page
You will find lots of articles regarding Dependency Injection and why you should implement this design pattern. While this post is not about the “why” but the “how”, my two cents to “why do it” is below: Code becomes easily testable Components/layers are decoupled Overall promotes maintainability and good software practice This post will guide
This is a pretty neat way to bundle and optimize your CSS and Javascript files within your ASP.NET application. Install the nuget package Microsoft ASP.NET Web Optimization Framework Add a new class inside the App_Start folder > BundleConfig.cs Register/group your CSS and JS files the way you want it public class BundleConfig { public static
In this post, I will go through the steps I took to disable the built-in membership provider of Episerver and instead use Azure’s Active Directory authentication. Register your Episerver app within your Azure Active Directory (AD) You will first need to register your app on the Azure AD. Follow this post I created before proceeding to
Took me a while to find out, but deploying a SQL Server database to Azure is actually very easy. Make sure you have your Azure connection details ready! The below instructions / screenshots are from SSMS 2016. Should work for older versions too, although you might see different wordings. Open SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS) and
Thanks to Ted and a guy from CodeInside for your blogs which helped come up with this solution. Problem: Create an RSS feed for ASP.NET MVC Website with EPiServer Solution: We need three things 1. RssResult class 2. RssPage page type 3. RssPageController which creates the xml rss feed So let’s begin with the RssResult
Ha, another milestone for me – I was able to create an XForm in EPiServer and hook it up to a block! First step I took: Create a Form block, which consists of the following properties: public class FormBlock { public virtual string Heading { get; set; } public virtual XForm Form { get; set;