How do I generate and return a KML document directly to the browser without writing a temporary file to the server or relying on a 3rd party library or class?
1 Answers
I suggest you consider using an HTTP Handler instead of a ASP.NET page. It will be cleaner and more performant. Just add new item of type "Generic Handler" to your project and consider moving the code to its ProcessRequest
method. The general approach is good, though.
By the way, unless you are explicitly mapping .kml
files to an ASP.NET handler, it'll not run anyway. I suggest going with the default .ashx
extension and add a Content-Disposition
HTTP header to set the filename for the client:
Response.AddHeader("Content-Disposition", "attachment; filename=File.kml");
Also, note that you should set header stuff before anything is sent to the client so you should move setting Content-Type
and adding header before other stuff.
Full Solution (From the OP):
Here's how I did it:
Server
- Add the .kml mimetype to the folder where you want this "file" to live. Say,
\\myDevServer\...\InetPub\KML
(Google's instructions are only for Apache)- Open
Internet Information Services (IIS) Manager
on your DEV server - Navigate to your DEV site
- Right-click the
KML
folder and chooseProperties
- Click the
HTTP Headers
tab - Click the
MIME types
button - Click
New
- Enter
- Extension: .kml
- MIME Type: application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml
- Click
OK
twice to get back to theHTTP Headers
tab
- Open
- Set the
KML
folder as an ASP.NET application (maybe optional depending on how your server is set up)- Click the
Directory
tab - Click the
Create
button - The
Application name
field becomes active with the settingKML
- Click
OK
taking you back to the main IIS Manager window
- Click the
Website
- Open VS2008:
- File >> New Website
- Choose:
Empty Web Site
- Language:
C#
- Location:
\\myDevServer\...\InetPub\KML\
- In
Solution Explorer
- Rightclick the website
- Choose
New Item
- Choose
Generic Handler
from theVisual Studio installed templates
window - Enter a name (I used
MelroseVista.ashx
) - Choose Language:
Visual C#
- Click
OK
- Paste the following code
//
using System;
using System.Web;
using System.Xml;
public class Handler : IHttpHandler
{
public void ProcessRequest( HttpContext context)
{
context.Response.ContentType = "application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml";
context.Response.AddHeader("Content-Disposition", "attachment; filename=MelroseVista.kml");
XmlTextWriter kml = new XmlTextWriter(context.Response.OutputStream, System.Text.Encoding.UTF8);
kml.Formatting = Formatting.Indented;
kml.Indentation = 3;
kml.WriteStartDocument();
kml.WriteStartElement("kml", "http://www.opengis.net/kml/2.2");
kml.WriteStartElement("Placemark");
kml.WriteElementString("name", "Melrose Vista FL");
kml.WriteElementString("description", "A nice little town");
kml.WriteStartElement("Point");
kml.WriteElementString("coordinates", "-80.18451400000000000000,26.08816400000000000000,0");
kml.WriteEndElement(); // <Point>
kml.WriteEndElement(); // <Placemark>
kml.WriteEndDocument(); // <kml>
kml.Close();
}
public bool IsReusable
{
get
{
return false;
}
}
}
- Attempt to load your page in your favorite browser
- You should get a popup asking you to
open
orsave
the resulting KML file. - If you
open
it, you should have GoogleEarth launch itself and zoom to a thumbtack in Eastern Florida - If you
save
it, you should see the following in the file
\
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<kml xmlns="http://www.opengis.net/kml/2.2">
<Placemark>
<name>Melrose Vista FL</name>
<description>A nice little town</description>
<Point>
<coordinates>-80.18451400000000000000,26.08816400000000000000,0</coordinates>
</Point>
</Placemark>
</kml>
Note: XmlTextWriter
worked pretty well here. However, I think XMLDocument
looks more promising for larger KML files since you can manipulate it in memory before pushing it to the user. If, for example, you want the same point to appear in multiple folders in the GoogleEarth Locations tree.

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I'll look into using an HTTP handler thanks. Do you have a favorite, specific example? Assuming I end up going with what I have, would you point me towards an answer #2 above? My background is mostly perl hacking and I'm having trouble getting my head around integrating the code-behind to the actual page the browser's asking for. – Sukotto Jun 04 '09 at 20:42
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hmm... comments don't preserve vertical whitespace :-( – Sukotto Jun 04 '09 at 20:43
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You don't need an example. Just right click on the project -> Add new item -> Generic Handler. It'll create a template for you. Copy and paste the code in Page_Load above to the ProcessRequest method. The only thing you need to change is adding a "var Response = context.Response" at the beginning of the method. I found one anyway: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/873207/force-download-of-a-file-on-web-server-asp-net-c/873228#873228 – Mehrdad Afshari Jun 04 '09 at 20:55