Release management with different configurations

So Visual Studio Team Services now has this automatic deployment option, where you can checkin your changes in source control to have the application deployed to a development/testing/production environment automatically. 

But how do you cope with each environment's different configuration? Read on...

What we want

As you are developing locally you probably want to develop on a local database. The easiest way to do this is to have everything in web.config (I am using a web project as an example here, but things are similar for other project types). This way developers can quickly change things locally, for easy testing with different databases, and even see how things work with live (I hope cloned from production) data.

But when deploying to a test environment (and other environments such as production) you want to use a different web.config, preferably NOT containing any production secrets (like the connection string to the production database).

VSTS release management makes this very easy.

How To

Let's say that I have application settings and connection strings that I want to give a different value in development, QA and release:

  <appSettings>
    <add key="Secret" value="DeveloperSecret"/>
  </appSettings>
  <connectionStrings>
    <add name="DB" connectionString="DeveloperDB"/>
  </connectionStrings>

I have already created a Build definition in VSTS, and I am using it to initiate a release with VSTS release management.

In my release definition I have three environments, one for dev, QA and production.

For each environment, click on the ellipsis (...) button and choose Configure variable


Add variables who's key matches the key from appSettings (or name for connectionStrings)


Select your deploy to azure task in release management


Look for the File Transforms & Variable Substitution Options section and make sure you check the XML variable substitution checkbox.


This will make the deployment task replace any key in appSettings and connectionStrings with your variable values.

That's it!