You're using the wrong tool for the job.

Knock up an ASPX that lists the files and deploy that into an App Service

Or just put the doco (how big can it be?) in an App Service and turn on
directory browsing.

On Thu, 21 Apr 2016 at 14:51 Greg Keogh <gfke...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Folks, I hoping to assign an Azure Container as a download location for
> releases and documentation, so I stuffed some test files into a container,
> made it public and browsed to it:
>
> https://redcentre.blob.core.windows.net/download (produces
> ResourceNotFound)
> https://redcentre.blob.core.windows.net/download?comp=list (produces an
> XML blob list)
>
> I was hoping to see a directory browse list like you typically see in a
> web browser (when permitted) so you can click on a file and download it. I
> tried putting a web.config in the container but it makes no difference. A
> container *isn't* a web server so I guess I can't complain, but it would
> have been nice.
>
> Does anyone of some weird trick to make the container show a file list
> like IIS does? Maybe some magic container header or request parameter?
>
> *Greg*
>
-- 
David Connors
da...@connors.com | @davidconnors | LinkedIn | +61 417 189 363

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