From the course: SharePoint Framework for Developers: 3 Deployment, Upgrades, and Lifecycle

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Demonstrate the Office 365 CDN with a text file

Demonstrate the Office 365 CDN with a text file

From the course: SharePoint Framework for Developers: 3 Deployment, Upgrades, and Lifecycle

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Demonstrate the Office 365 CDN with a text file

- [Instructor] Now once you have enabled Office 365 to act as a CDN and, also, you have added a CDN origin, your output using the Office 365 CLI should look similar to this. So you see that slash SITES slash CDN slash CDNDOCS, well, it's now available for use. It doesn't say configuration pending at the end of it. You can do this check using Office 365 PowerShell also. Also look at the policy here. So the policy here says that CSS, EOT, and all of these extensions should be available to be served through my Office 365 tenancy. Let's try with a text file. So I have a text file here. You can use any text file but certainly you're welcome to use this one. And this file, I'm going to go ahead and drag/drop it inside of my Office 365 tenancy. Okay. Now this should be available on a well known URL. Well, what URL? We'll see that in a second. But before I actually am able to test it I need to great a https request in a certain manner with a certain referrer in the header. So, I'm going to…

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