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Microsoft Azure Development Cookbook Second Edition

You're reading from   Microsoft Azure Development Cookbook Second Edition Over 70 advanced recipes for developing scalable services with the Microsoft Azure platform

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782170327
Length 422 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Developing Cloud Services for Microsoft Azure FREE CHAPTER 2. Deploying Quickly with Azure Websites 3. Getting Storage with Blobs in Azure 4. Going Relational with the Azure SQL Database 5. Going NoSQL with Azure Tables 6. Messaging and Queues with the Storage and Service Bus 7. Managing Azure Resources with the Azure Management Libraries 8. Going In-memory with Azure Cache Index

Creating and using the root container for blobs


The Azure Blob service supports a simple two-level hierarchy for blobs. There is a single level of containers, each of which might contain zero or more blobs. Containers might not contain other containers.

In the Blob service, a blob resource is addressed as follows:

http://{account}.blob.core.windows.net/{container}/{blob}

The {account}, {container}, and {blob} parts represent the names of the storage account, container, and blob, respectively.

This addressing convention works for most uses of blobs. In certain situations, we need to place content inside the root space. Microsoft added support for a root container named $root to the Blob service so that it could host content.

Tip

When using Silverlight, the runtime requires that a cross-domain policy file reside at the root of the domain and not beneath a container as would be the case with the standard addressing for blobs. The cross-domain policy file allows a web client to access data from more...

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