This probably is a dummy question but I cannot find a clear indication. I have a POCO class in a MVC3 web application whose only purpose is managing the backup of some files in the server. Typically it creates a backup and returns the filename to the controller, which sends an email with the URL for downloading it. This works fine, but I cannot build the absolute URL to be sent. No matter which function I use, I always get a relative URL, like /Backup/TheFile.zip, rather than e.g. http://www.somesite.com/Backup/TheFile.zip. I tried:
VirtualPathUtility.ToAbsolute("~/Backup/SomeFile.zip");
HttpRuntime.AppDomainAppVirtualPath + "/Backup/SomeFile.zip";
Url.Content("~/Backup/SomeFile.zip");
but they all return something like /Backup/SomeFile.zip. Any idea?
You have a few options:
This works for me:
Usage in cshtml:
From within the controller:
I wrote a helper class for this, for MVC 5... It's pretty flexible, and is particularly useful if you need this functionality when you aren't inside a controller. You should be able to drop it right into a project and go.
As Meligy pointed out, the key is to include the protocol. Here I have it hard coded as http, so if you want to use SSL that might need to become a bit more flexible.
In ASP.Net Core 2.0 (MVC) this works to create an absolute url to an action.
You can do it by the following:
Instead of
Url.Action()
in this sample, you can also useUrl.Content()
, or any routing method, or really just pass a path.But if the URL does go to a
Controller
Action
, there is a more compact way:The trick here is that once you specify the
protocol
/scheme when calling any routing method, you get an absolute URL. I recommend this one when possible, but you also have the more generic way in the first example in case you need it.I have blogged about it in details here:
http://gurustop.net/blog/2012/03/23/writing-absolute-urls-to-other-actions-in-asp-net-mvc/