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The dotnet publish command compiles app code and copies the files required to run the app into a publish folder. When deploying from Visual Studio, the dotnet publish step occurs automatically before the files are copied to the deployment destination.
Run the published app locally
To run the published app locally, run dotnet <ApplicationName>.dll from the publish folder.
Publish settings files
*.json files are published by default. To publish other settings files, specify them in an <ItemGroup><Content Include= ... /> element in the project file. The following example publishes XML files:
The publish folder contains one or more app assembly files, dependencies, and optionally the .NET runtime.
A .NET Core app can be published as self-contained deployment or framework-dependent deployment. If the app is self-contained, the assembly files that contain the .NET runtime are included in the publish folder. If the app is framework-dependent, the .NET runtime files aren't included because the app has a reference to a version of .NET that's installed on the server. The default deployment model is framework-dependent. For more information, see .NET Core application deployment.
In addition to .exe and .dll files, the publish folder for an ASP.NET Core app typically contains configuration files, static assets, and MVC views. For more information, see ASP.NET Core directory structure.
Set up a process manager
An ASP.NET Core app is a console app that must be started when a server boots and restarted if it crashes. To automate starts and restarts, a process manager is required. The most common process managers for ASP.NET Core are:
If the app uses the Kestrel server, Nginx, or IIS can be used as a reverse proxy server. A reverse proxy server receives HTTP requests from the Internet and forwards them to Kestrel.
Either configuration—with or without a reverse proxy server—is a supported hosting configuration. For more information, see When to use Kestrel with a reverse proxy.
Either configuration—with or without a reverse proxy server—is a supported hosting configuration. For more information, see When to use Kestrel with a reverse proxy.
Proxy server and load balancer scenarios
Additional configuration might be required for apps hosted behind proxy servers and load balancers. Without additional configuration, an app might not have access to the scheme (HTTP/HTTPS) and the remote IP address where a request originated. For more information, see Configure ASP.NET Core to work with proxy servers and load balancers.
Use Visual Studio and MSBuild to automate deployments
For deployments to Internet Information Services (IIS) with configuration provided by the web.config file, see the articles under Host ASP.NET Core on Windows with IIS.
Host in a web farm
For information on configuration for hosting ASP.NET Core apps in a web farm environment (for example, deployment of multiple instances of your app for scalability), see Host ASP.NET Core in a web farm.
In general, to deploy an ASP.NET Core app to a hosting environment:
Deploy the published app to a folder on the hosting server.
Set up a process manager that starts the app when requests arrive and restarts the app after it crashes or the server reboots.
For configuration of a reverse proxy, set up a reverse proxy to forward requests to the app.
Publish to a folder
The dotnet publish command compiles app code and copies the files required to run the app into a publish folder. When deploying from Visual Studio, the dotnet publish step occurs automatically before the files are copied to the deployment destination.
Folder contents
The publish folder contains one or more app assembly files, dependencies, and optionally the .NET runtime.
A .NET Core app can be published as self-contained deployment or framework-dependent deployment. If the app is self-contained, the assembly files that contain the .NET runtime are included in the publish folder. If the app is framework-dependent, the .NET runtime files aren't included because the app has a reference to a version of .NET that's installed on the server. The default deployment model is framework-dependent. For more information, see .NET Core application deployment.
In addition to .exe and .dll files, the publish folder for an ASP.NET Core app typically contains configuration files, static assets, and MVC views. For more information, see ASP.NET Core directory structure.
Set up a process manager
An ASP.NET Core app is a console app that must be started when a server boots and restarted if it crashes. To automate starts and restarts, a process manager is required. The most common process managers for ASP.NET Core are:
If the app uses the Kestrel server, Nginx, or IIS can be used as a reverse proxy server. A reverse proxy server receives HTTP requests from the Internet and forwards them to Kestrel.
Either configuration—with or without a reverse proxy server—is a supported hosting configuration. For more information, see When to use Kestrel with a reverse proxy.
Proxy server and load balancer scenarios
Additional configuration might be required for apps hosted behind proxy servers and load balancers. Without additional configuration, an app might not have access to the scheme (HTTP/HTTPS) and the remote IP address where a request originated. For more information, see Configure ASP.NET Core to work with proxy servers and load balancers.
Use Visual Studio and MSBuild to automate deployments
For deployments to Internet Information Services (IIS) with configuration provided by the web.config file, see the articles under Host ASP.NET Core on Windows with IIS.
Host in a web farm
For information on configuration for hosting ASP.NET Core apps in a web farm environment (for example, deployment of multiple instances of your app for scalability), see Host ASP.NET Core in a web farm.
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