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Home/ Questions/Q 7746249
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 1, 20262026-06-01T10:13:50+00:00 2026-06-01T10:13:50+00:00

OK, so I did the dumb thing and released production code (C#, VS2010) that

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OK, so I did the dumb thing and released production code (C#, VS2010) that targeted our development database (SQL Server 2008 R2). Luckily we are not using the production database yet so I didn’t have the pain of trying to recover and synchronize everything…

But, I want to prevent this from happening again when it could be much more painful. My idea is to add a table I can query at startup and determine what database I am connected to by the value returned. Production would return “PROD” and dev and test would return other values, for example.

If it makes any difference, the application talks to a WCF service to access the database so I have endpoints in the config file, not actual connection strings.

Does this make sense? How have others addressed this problem?

Thanks,
Dave

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-01T10:13:51+00:00Added an answer on June 1, 2026 at 10:13 am

    The easiest way to solve this is to not have access to production accounts. Those are stored in the Machine.config file for our .net applications. In non-.net applications this is easily duplicated, by having a config file in a common location, or (dare I say) a registry entry which holds the account information.

    Most of our servers are accessed through aliases too, so no one really needs to change the connection string from environment to environment. Just grab the user from the config and the server alias in the hosts file points you to the correct server. This also removes the headache from us having to update all our config files when we switch db instances (change hardware etc.)

    So even with the click once deployment and the end points. You can publish the a new endpoint URI in a machine config on the end users desktop (I’m assuming this is an internal application), and then reference that in the code.

    If you absolutely can’t do this, as this might be a lot of work (last place I worked had 2000 call center people, so this push was a lot more difficult, but still possible). You can always have an automated build server setup which modifies the app.config file for you as a last step of building the application for you. You then ALWAYS publish the compiled code from the automated build server. Never have the change in the app.config for something like this be a manual step in the developer’s process. This will always lead to problems at some point.

    Now if none of this works, your final option (done this one too), which I hated, but it worked is to look up the value off of a mapped drive. Essentially, everyone in the company has a mapped drive to say R:. This is where you have your production configuration files etc. The prod account people map to one drive location with the production values, and the devs etc. map to another with the development values. I hate this option compared to the others, but it works, and it can save you in a pinch with others become tedious and difficult (due to say office politics, setting up a build server etc.).

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