To use user secrets, you must first initialize your project. This adds a UserSecretsId to your .csproj file, which maps your project to a specific folder in your local user profile.
Run the following command in your project directory: dotnet user-secrets init ``` Use code with caution. Copied to clipboard 2. Add Your Secrets How to manage user secrets in ASP.NET Core
In ASP.NET Core, WebApplication.CreateBuilder automatically includes the user secrets configuration source when the environment is set to . You can access these secrets using the standard Configuration API or the Options Pattern . Using IConfiguration: To use user secrets, you must first initialize your project
dotnet user-secrets set "ServiceApiKey" "12345" ``` To group secrets (e.g., for a "Movies" section), use a colon: ```bash dotnet user-secrets set "Movies:ServiceApiKey" "12345" ``` Use code with caution. Copied to clipboard 3. Access Secrets in Code Copied to clipboard 2
Once initialized, secrets are stored in a secrets.json file located in your user profile folder (e.g., %APPDATA%\Microsoft\UserSecrets\ on Windows or ~/.microsoft/usersecrets/ on macOS/Linux).
The tool in ASP.NET Core provides a safe way to store this information during local development by keeping it outside your project directory. 1. Enable Secret Storage
Adding them directly to the secrets.json file that opens after you select Manage User Secrets . Via .NET CLI: Use the set command to add individual keys: