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TraitéeWould a Azure Storage Web UI be useful?

  • mardi 6 janvier 2009 14:38jmw2trinculo Médailles de l'utilisateurMédailles de l'utilisateurMédailles de l'utilisateurMédailles de l'utilisateurMédailles de l'utilisateur
     
    Hi all,

    Whilst working on an Azure project (mostly dev fabric based, little bit in the actual cloud) I found I frequently wanted to look at the state of the azure storage (blob/queue/table) to view status of the app, check a blob/record had been successfully stored, etc.

    I am aware that it is possible to mount storage in powershell, view table storage via SQL Management Studio etc.

    What I was wondering is if other Azure devs think it would be useful to have a Web-based Storage UI, which would allow you to view Blob/Queue/Table storage, in a nice AJAX/Silverlight/etc web front-end, with the ability to add/remove/delete items...???


    It may be that I'm alone in thinking this would be cool and very useful, or maybe it has already been done, or planned for future releases.

    Let me know and if there's a gap in the market, i'm happy to build it!

    Cheers, j
    joew

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  • mardi 6 janvier 2009 16:19Roger Jennings Médailles de l'utilisateurMédailles de l'utilisateurMédailles de l'utilisateurMédailles de l'utilisateurMédailles de l'utilisateur
     Traitée
    There are several UIs for Azure storage and logs available, but the ones I've tried leave much to be desired. Examples:

    Sergei Meleshchuk’s Azure storage viewer post of 12/24/2008 showed a storage browser for Queues, Blogs and Tables that looked promising, but it wouldn’t run for me. Starting the app causes it to immediately stop running under Windows Vista Ultimate on two computers. Others confirm it won't run on Vista. If Sergei fixes his app to run on Vista, it probably would satisfy most users.

    Chris Hay offers his Windows Azure Blob Browser WPF application for CRUD operations on Azure blobs that you can download from here. It's list boxes aren't expandable and don't have scrollbars, but I use it.

    David Aiken’s Windows Azure Online Log Reader is a no-frills Azure Services log reader by the author of Yap, an Azure-based Twitter clone with LiveID login but a terrible user experience.

    David LemphersWindows Azure Logs! post of 1/1/2009 starts the new year with a spartan LogBrowser project that I couldn’t get to read my logs.

    Above are from recent OakLeaf blog posts.

    --rj

    Check out the Azure Table and Blob test harnesses at http://oakleaf.cloudapp.net/ and http://oakleaf2.cloudapp.net/.
    OakLeaf Blog

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