How to use a Session provider in a DI project - asp.net-mvc

I am developing a web application in ASP.NET MVC5.
Like all basic web applications it also has a login page where a user can authenticate himself. Once authenticated I want to store a couple of user-related items in the Session so I don't have to query the database every time to reconstruct the authenticated user.
After having read Mark Seemann's book about Dependency Injection I want to loosely couple all my layers and make sure that everything can easily be replaced.
At the moment my SessionProvider is by default using the Session object, but maybe in the future this could change to another type of storage mechanism.
The approach I have taken is by using Ambient Context which he explained with the TimeProvider example, but I am wondering if this is the right approach for this functionality and if it is thread safe (also for unit testing).
Is my solution proper or how would you implement such a mechanism? This has been in my head for days now so who can help me define the best solution?
Thanks!
public abstract class SessionProvider
{
private static SessionProvider _current;
static SessionProvider()
{
_current = new DefaultSessionProvider();
}
public static SessionProvider Current
{
get { return _current; }
set
{
if (value == null)
{
throw new ArgumentNullException();
}
_current = value;
}
}
public abstract string UserName { get; set; }
}
My local default:
public class DefaultSessionProvider : SessionProvider
{
public override string UserName
{
get { return (string) HttpContext.Current.Session["username"]; }
set { HttpContext.Current.Session["username"] = value; }
}
}
So I have access in my entire solution to my SessionProvider, whether this is a real session object or a database-driven storage mechanism...
SessionProvider.Current.UserName = "myUserName";

Once authenticated I want to store a couple of user-related items in
the Session so I don't have to query the database every time to
reconstruct the authenticated user.
Well, it looks like you're working on some sort of caching mechanism. It doesn't really matter if it's in a Session or in Redis cache, or any other type of cache. And this cache is key-value storage. I would create cache interface, something like that:
interface ICache
{
object this[string key] {get; set;}
}
And create concrete classes. SessionCache in your case:
public SessionCache : ICache
{
private IHttpSessionState _session;
public SessionCache(IHttpSessionState session)
{
_session = session;
}
// ICache implementation goes here...
}
So you'll narrow down the problem to dependency-inject Session object to concrete class (SessionCache). With Ninject you can do something like:
.WithConstructorArgument("session",ninjectContext=>HttpContext.Session);
And after that you can finally make your controllers dependent on ICache.
In your unit tests project you can create another ICache concrete class, something like DummyCache with in-memory cache. So you can test your controllers without sticking to Session object.

Related

Manage multiple ravendb document stores through castle windsor in an MVC app?

I twist myself around a workable solution to use several databases in RavenDB for an ASP.Net MVC app using Castle Windsor for the wiring.
This is the current installer
public class RavenInstaller : IWindsorInstaller
{
public void Install(IWindsorContainer container, IConfigurationStore store)
{
container.Register(
Component.For<IDocumentStore>().Instance(CreateDocumentStore()).LifeStyle.Singleton,
Component.For<IDocumentSession>().UsingFactoryMethod(GetDocumentSesssion).LifeStyle.PerWebRequest
);
}
static IDocumentStore CreateDocumentStore()
{
var store = new DocumentStore { ConnectionStringName = "RavenDb_CS9" };
store.Initialize();
IndexCreation.CreateIndexes(typeof(Users).Assembly, store);
return store;
}
static IDocumentSession GetDocumentSesssion(IKernel kernel)
{
var store = kernel.Resolve<IDocumentStore>();
return store.OpenSession();
}
}
The above works perfect but only for one Database.
I can't find the proper thinking how to handle another database. The whole chain starts with a domain service asking for an IDocumentSession. Then the flow is as specified in the above installer. But where/how do I ask for a "SessionToDb1" or a "SessionToDb2"?
The important is of course what connection string to use (where the DB property is specified) but also what indexes to create in respective DB / DocumentStore.
Did anyone accomplish this using Windsor? Am I thinking/attacking it wrong here?
Thanks!
Because you have:
Component.For<IDocumentSession>()
.UsingFactoryMethod(GetDocumentSesssion)
.LifeStyle.PerWebRequest
Your GetDocumentSession method is going to be called any time you inject an IDocumentSession. This is good.
When working with multiple databases, you need to pass the database name as a parameter to OpenSession. So, you need some way to resolve which database you would like to connect to based on the current web request.
You need to modify the GetDocumentSession method to implement whatever custom logic you are going to use. For example, you may want to look at a cookie, asp.net session item, current thread principal, or some other criteria. The decision is custom to your application, all that matters is somehow you open the session with the correct database name.
I've run into this problem before with nhibernate.
I found the best solution is to create a SessionManager class which wraps the Creation of the document store and the Session..
So I.E.
public interface ISessionManager
{
void BuildDocumentStore();
IDocumentSession OpenSession();
}
public interface ISiteSessionManager : ISessionManager
{
}
public class SiteSessionManager : ISiteSessionManager
{
IDocumentStore _documentStore;
public SiteSessionManager()
{
BuildDocumentStore();
}
public void BuildDocumentStore()
{
_documentStore = new DocumentStore
{
Url = "http://localhost:88",
DefaultDatabase = "test"
};
_documentStore.Initialize();
IndexCreation.CreateIndexes(typeof(SiteSessionManager).Assembly, _documentStore);
}
public IDocumentSession OpenSession()
{
return _documentStore.OpenSession();
}
}
// And then!.
Container.Register(Component.For<ISiteSessionManager>().Instance(new SiteSessionManager()).LifestyleSingleton());
// And then!.
public class FindUsers
{
readonly ISiteSessionManager _siteSessionManager;
public FindUsers(ISiteSessionManager siteSessionManager)
{
_siteSessionManager = siteSessionManager;
}
public IList<User> GetUsers()
{
using (var session = _siteSessionManager.OpenSession())
{
// do your query
return null;
}
}
}
Rinse and repeat for multiple databases.!

Multitenancy with Fluent nHibernate and Ninject. One Database per Tenant

I'm building a multi-tenant web application where for security concerns, we need to have one instance of the database per tenant. So I have a MainDB for authentication and many ClientDB for application data.
I am using Asp.net MVC with Ninject and Fluent nHibernate. I have already setup my SessionFactory/Session/Repositories using Ninject and Fluent nHibernate in a Ninject Module at the start of the application. My sessions are PerRequestScope, as are repositories.
My problem is now I need to instanciate a SessionFactory (SingletonScope) instance for each of my tenants whenever one of them connects to the application and create a new session and necessary repositories for each webrequest. I'm puzzled as to how to do this and would need a concrete example.
Here's the situation.
Application starts : The user of TenantX enters his login info. SessionFactory of MainDB gets created and opens a session to the MainDB to authenticate the user. Then the application creates the auth cookie.
Tenant accesses the application : The Tenant Name + ConnectionString are extracted from MainDB and Ninject must construct a tenant specific SessionFactory (SingletonScope) for that tenant. The rest of the web request, all controllers requiring a repository will be inject with a Tenant specific session/repository based on that tenant's SessionFactory.
How do I setup that dynamic with Ninject? I was originally using Named instance when I had multiple databases but now that the databases are tenant specific, I'm lost...
After further research I can give you a better answer.
Whilst it's possible to pass a connection string to ISession.OpenSession a better approach is to create a custom ConnectionProvider. The simplest approach is to derive from DriverConnectionProvider and override the ConnectionString property:
public class TenantConnectionProvider : DriverConnectionProvider
{
protected override string ConnectionString
{
get
{
// load the tenant connection string
return "";
}
}
public override void Configure(IDictionary<string, string> settings)
{
ConfigureDriver(settings);
}
}
Using FluentNHibernate you set the provider like so:
var config = Fluently.Configure()
.Database(
MsSqlConfiguration.MsSql2008
.Provider<TenantConnectionProvider>()
)
The ConnectionProvider is evaluated each time you open a session allowing you to connect to tenant specific databases in your application.
An issue with the above approach is that the SessionFactory is shared. This is not really a problem if you are only using the first level cache (since this is tied to the session) but is if you decide to enable the second level cache (tied to the SessionFactory).
The recommended approach therefore is to have a SessionFactory-per-tenant (this would apply to schema-per-tenant and database-per-tenant strategies).
Another issue often overlooked is that although the second level cache is tied to the SessionFactory, in some cases the cache space itself is shared (reference). This can be resolved by setting the "regionName" property of the provider.
Below is a working implementation of SessionFactory-per-tenant based on your requirements.
The Tenant class contains the information we need to set up NHibernate for the tenant:
public class Tenant : IEquatable<Tenant>
{
public string Name { get; set; }
public string ConnectionString { get; set; }
public bool Equals(Tenant other)
{
if (other == null)
return false;
return other.Name.Equals(Name) && other.ConnectionString.Equals(ConnectionString);
}
public override bool Equals(object obj)
{
return Equals(obj as Tenant);
}
public override int GetHashCode()
{
return string.Concat(Name, ConnectionString).GetHashCode();
}
}
Since we'll be storing a Dictionary<Tenant, ISessionFactory> we implement the IEquatable interface so we can evaluate the Tenant keys.
The process of getting the current tenant is abstracted like so:
public interface ITenantAccessor
{
Tenant GetCurrentTenant();
}
public class DefaultTenantAccessor : ITenantAccessor
{
public Tenant GetCurrentTenant()
{
// your implementation here
return null;
}
}
Finally the NHibernateSessionSource which manages the sessions:
public interface ISessionSource
{
ISession CreateSession();
}
public class NHibernateSessionSource : ISessionSource
{
private Dictionary<Tenant, ISessionFactory> sessionFactories =
new Dictionary<Tenant, ISessionFactory>();
private static readonly object factorySyncRoot = new object();
private string defaultConnectionString =
#"Server=(local)\sqlexpress;Database=NHibernateMultiTenancy;integrated security=true;";
private readonly ISessionFactory defaultSessionFactory;
private readonly ITenantAccessor tenantAccessor;
public NHibernateSessionSource(ITenantAccessor tenantAccessor)
{
if (tenantAccessor == null)
throw new ArgumentNullException("tenantAccessor");
this.tenantAccessor = tenantAccessor;
lock (factorySyncRoot)
{
if (defaultSessionFactory != null) return;
var configuration = AssembleConfiguration("default", defaultConnectionString);
defaultSessionFactory = configuration.BuildSessionFactory();
}
}
private Configuration AssembleConfiguration(string name, string connectionString)
{
return Fluently.Configure()
.Database(
MsSqlConfiguration.MsSql2008.ConnectionString(connectionString)
)
.Mappings(cfg =>
{
cfg.FluentMappings.AddFromAssemblyOf<NHibernateSessionSource>();
})
.Cache(c =>
c.UseSecondLevelCache()
.ProviderClass<HashtableCacheProvider>()
.RegionPrefix(name)
)
.ExposeConfiguration(
c => c.SetProperty(NHibernate.Cfg.Environment.SessionFactoryName, name)
)
.BuildConfiguration();
}
private ISessionFactory GetSessionFactory(Tenant currentTenant)
{
ISessionFactory tenantSessionFactory;
sessionFactories.TryGetValue(currentTenant, out tenantSessionFactory);
if (tenantSessionFactory == null)
{
var configuration = AssembleConfiguration(currentTenant.Name, currentTenant.ConnectionString);
tenantSessionFactory = configuration.BuildSessionFactory();
lock (factorySyncRoot)
{
sessionFactories.Add(currentTenant, tenantSessionFactory);
}
}
return tenantSessionFactory;
}
public ISession CreateSession()
{
var tenant = tenantAccessor.GetCurrentTenant();
if (tenant == null)
{
return defaultSessionFactory.OpenSession();
}
return GetSessionFactory(tenant).OpenSession();
}
}
When we create an instance of NHibernateSessionSource we set up a default SessionFactory to our "default" database.
When CreateSession() is called we get a ISessionFactory instance. This will either be the default session factory (if the current tenant is null) or a tenant specific session factory. The task of locating the tenant specific session factory is performed by the GetSessionFactory method.
Finally we call OpenSession on the ISessionFactory instance we have obtained.
Note that when we create a session factory we set the SessionFactory name (for debugging/profiling purposes) and cache region prefix (for the reasons mentioned above).
Our IoC tool (in my case StructureMap) wires everything up:
x.For<ISessionSource>().Singleton().Use<NHibernateSessionSource>();
x.For<ISession>().HttpContextScoped().Use(ctx =>
ctx.GetInstance<ISessionSource>().CreateSession());
x.For<ITenantAccessor>().Use<DefaultTenantAccessor>();
Here NHibernateSessionSource is scoped as a singleton and ISession per request.
Hope this helps.
If all the databases are on the same machine, maybe the schema property of class mappings could be used to set the database on a pre-tenant basis.

Persist data between different controllers from a base page

I am not sure I am asking the right question here.
I have a shared page (master page) that calls a couple of partial pages for side menu, header, footer etc.. and all my controllers inherit a BaseController.
Now, depending on the user login status, I need to show different data in all those partial pages and I thought where is the best place to check whether a user is logged in or not - BaseController.
And therein lies my problem. I need to contact one of my web services to see if a user is logged in and get some relevant data if he is. I only need to do this once, and since all controllers inherit from BaseController, each of those partial page calls results in the web service call.
Obviously, I cannot just stick a private bool variable isUserAuthenticated and check for flag, as, each controller will have a new instance of the base controller.
In traditional asp.net projects, I would put this stuff in HttpContext.Current.Items[] and use re-use it but I cannot (somehow) access that in MVC.
I cannot just not inherit from basepage on partial pages as they can also be called independently and I need to know the user login status then too.
What is the best way to call a function just once, or, rather, store a bool value for the duration of one call only? - accessible between controlers..
How do people do this?
thanks, sorry, I'm a newbie to mvc!
You can still use HttpContext.Items, but you'll need to access it via a HttpContextBase instance.
For backwards compatibility you can wrap an HttpContext in an HttpContextWrapper, like so
var context = new HttpContextWrapper(HttpContext.Current);
#iamserious's answer above suggests using a static property - which I strongly disagree with. Setting a static variable is application wide and would mean each and every user would be using the same variable - so all would have the same login data. You want to store it either per user in Session or per Request via HttpContext.Items.
I'd suggest doing something using like this approach, then no matter where you call ContextStash.GetInstance, you'll receive the same instance for the lifetime of the same request. You could also follow the same pattern and use HttpContext.Session instead of HttpContext.Items:
// could use this.HttpContext inside a controller,
// or this.Context inside a view,
// or simply HttpContext.Current
var stash = ContextStash.GetInstance(this.HttpContext);
if(!stash.IsSomething)
{
// do something to populate stash.IsSomething
}
// class
public class ContextStash
{
const string cacheKey = "ContextStash";
public ContextStash(HttpContextBase context)
{
// do something with context
}
// your shared properties
public bool IsSomething { get; set; }
public string Foo { get; set; }
public int Bar { get; set; }
// instance methods
public static ContextStash GetInstance()
{
return GetInstance(new HttpContextWrapper(HttpContext.Current));
}
public static ContextStash GetInstance(HttpContext context)
{
return GetInstance(new HttpContextWrapper( context ));
}
public static ContextStash GetInstance(HttpContextBase context)
{
ContextStash instance = context.Items[cacheKey] as ContextStash;
if(null == instance)
{
context.Items[cacheKey] = instance = new ContextStash(context);
}
return instance;
}
}
well, if you just want to one variable across several instances of BaseController, use the static keyword, like so:
public class BaseController : Controller
{
private static bool isUserAuthenticated;
}
Now, no matter how many instances of BaseController you have, they all will share a single isUserAuthenticated variable, you change value in one, you change it in all.
This is the very basic of most object oriented programming and you should really take some time out to go through the concepts of OOP, if you don't mind me saying.

Access the website settings of an asp.net mvc app stored in a database table using NHibernate

I have an ASP.NET MVC app which depends on a lot of settings (name-value pairs), I am planning to store this information in a database table called SiteSettings. Is there an easy way in which I can get these settings using NHibernate. And what are the best practices when saving settings for a web application. And by settings I mean the settings which control the flow of processes in the web application and which are governed by business rules. These are not the typical connection string kind of settings. I was unable to get much information on the web on this topic. Maybe I am not searching on the right keywords, Any help will be greatly appreciated.
I can't answer in the context of nhibernate (which I'm not using) or best practices (I came up with this on my own recently). However, it works well for me, and will probably work for you.
I have a table (Biz_Config) in the database to store business preferences. (I've created a web.config section for what I call IT preferences.)
I have a class that is in charge of managing the biz preferences. The constructor grabs the entire table (one row per setting) and copies these into a dictionary, and it has methods to access (such as bizconfig.get("key")) and update this dictionary, also updating the table at the same time. It also has a few shortcut properties for specific dictionary values, especially where the value has to be cast (I have a few important numbers). It works quite well.
In order to be more efficient and not instantiate it every time I need a setting, and also to access it easily from my controllers and views, I created a static class, Globals, that is in charge of getting things out of the session or application variables. For the biz config object, it checks the application variable and, if null, creates a new one. Otherwise it just returns it. Globals is part of my helpers namespace, which is included in my web.config to be available to my views. So I can easily call:
<% Globals.Biz_Config.Get("key") %>
I hope this helps. If you'd like code, I can dig that up for you.
James
If you have a set of key/value pairs, you probably want to use a <map>. See the official NHibernate documentation or Ayende's post about 'NHibernate Mapping - <map/>'.
I have come up with a solution which is quite similar to the one suggested by James. I have an SiteSettingsService class which manages the settings for the whole site, it has a simple dependency on an interface called ISiteServiceRepository. This might not be the most elegant solution, But it is working perfectly for me. I have also configured the SiteSettingsService class as a Singleton using StructureMap. So, it saves me unnecessary instantiantion every time I need any settings.
//ISiteServiceRepository, an implementation of this uses NHibernate to do just two things
//i)Get all the settings, ii)Persist all the settings
using System.Collections.Generic;
using Cosmicvent.Mcwa.Core.Domain.Model;
namespace Cosmicvent.Mcwa.Core.Domain {
public interface ISiteServiceRepository {
IList<Setting> GetSettings();
void PersistSettings(IDictionary<string, string> settings);
}
}
//The main SiteSettingsService class depends on the ISiteServiceRepository
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using Cosmicvent.Mcwa.Core.Domain;
using Cosmicvent.Mcwa.Core.Domain.Model;
namespace Cosmicvent.Mcwa.Core.Services {
public class SiteSettingsService : ISiteSettingsService {
private readonly ISiteServiceRepository _siteServiceRepository;
private IDictionary<string, string> _settings;
public SiteSettingsService(ISiteServiceRepository siteServiceRepository) {
_siteServiceRepository = siteServiceRepository;
//Fill up the settings
HydrateSettings();
}
public int ActiveDegreeId {
get {
return int.Parse(GetValue("Active_Degree_Id"));
}
}
public string SiteTitle {
get { return GetValue("Site_Title"); }
}
public decimal CounsellingFee {
get { return decimal.Parse(GetValue("Counselling_Fee")); }
}
public decimal TuitionFee {
get { return decimal.Parse(GetValue("Tuition_Fee")); }
}
public decimal RegistrationFee {
get { return decimal.Parse(GetValue("Registration_Fee")); }
}
public void UpdateSetting(string setting, string value) {
if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(setting) && !string.IsNullOrEmpty(value)) {
SetValue(setting, value);
PersistSettings();
}
}
//Helper methods
private void HydrateSettings() {
_settings = new Dictionary<string, string>();
IList<Setting> siteRepoSettings = _siteServiceRepository.GetSettings();
if (siteRepoSettings == null) {
throw new ArgumentException("Site Settings Repository returned a null dictionary");
}
foreach (Setting setting in siteRepoSettings) {
_settings.Add(setting.Name.ToUpper(), setting.Value);
}
}
private string GetValue(string key) {
key = key.ToUpper();
if (_settings == null) {
throw new NullReferenceException("The Site Settings object is Null");
}
if (!_settings.ContainsKey(key)) {
throw new KeyNotFoundException(string.Format("The site setting {0} was not found", key));
}
return _settings[key];
}
private void SetValue(string key, string value) {
key = key.ToUpper();
if (_settings == null) {
throw new NullReferenceException("The Site Settings object is Null");
}
if (!_settings.ContainsKey(key)) {
throw new KeyNotFoundException(string.Format("The site setting {0} was not found", key));
}
_settings[key] = value;
}
private void PersistSettings() {
_siteServiceRepository.PersistSettings(_settings);
}
}
}
Hope this helps future developers facing similar problems. Any suggestions for improving this are more than welcome.

Session variables in ASP.NET MVC

I am writing a web application that will allow a user to browse to multiple web pages within the website making certain requests. All information that the user inputs will be stored in an object that I created. The problem is that I need this object to be accessed from any part of the website and I don't really know the best way to accomplish this. I know that one solution is to use session variables but I don't know how to use them in asp .net MVC. And where would I declare a session variable? Is there any other way?
I would think you'll want to think about if things really belong in a session state. This is something I find myself doing every now and then and it's a nice strongly typed approach to the whole thing but you should be careful when putting things in the session context. Not everything should be there just because it belongs to some user.
in global.asax hook the OnSessionStart event
void OnSessionStart(...)
{
HttpContext.Current.Session.Add("__MySessionObject", new MySessionObject());
}
From anywhere in code where the HttpContext.Current property != null you can retrive that object. I do this with an extension method.
public static MySessionObject GetMySessionObject(this HttpContext current)
{
return current != null ? (MySessionObject)current.Session["__MySessionObject"] : null;
}
This way you can in code
void OnLoad(...)
{
var sessionObj = HttpContext.Current.GetMySessionObject();
// do something with 'sessionObj'
}
The answer here is correct, I however struggled to implement it in an ASP.NET MVC 3 app. I wanted to access a Session object in a controller and couldn't figure out why I kept on getting a "Instance not set to an instance of an Object error". What I noticed is that in a controller when I tried to access the session by doing the following, I kept on getting that error. This is due to the fact that this.HttpContext is part of the Controller object.
this.Session["blah"]
// or
this.HttpContext.Session["blah"]
However, what I wanted was the HttpContext that's part of the System.Web namespace because this is the one the Answer above suggests to use in Global.asax.cs. So I had to explicitly do the following:
System.Web.HttpContext.Current.Session["blah"]
this helped me, not sure if I did anything that isn't M.O. around here, but I hope it helps someone!
Because I dislike seeing "HTTPContext.Current.Session" about the place, I use a singleton pattern to access session variables, it gives you an easy to access strongly typed bag of data.
[Serializable]
public sealed class SessionSingleton
{
#region Singleton
private const string SESSION_SINGLETON_NAME = "Singleton_502E69E5-668B-E011-951F-00155DF26207";
private SessionSingleton()
{
}
public static SessionSingleton Current
{
get
{
if ( HttpContext.Current.Session[SESSION_SINGLETON_NAME] == null )
{
HttpContext.Current.Session[SESSION_SINGLETON_NAME] = new SessionSingleton();
}
return HttpContext.Current.Session[SESSION_SINGLETON_NAME] as SessionSingleton;
}
}
#endregion
public string SessionVariable { get; set; }
public string SessionVariable2 { get; set; }
// ...
then you can access your data from anywhere:
SessionSingleton.Current.SessionVariable = "Hello, World!";
Well, IMHO..
never reference a Session inside your view/master page
minimize your useage of Session. MVC provides TempData obj for this, which is basically a Session that lives for a single trip to the server.
With regards to #1, I have a strongly typed Master View which has a property to access whatever the Session object represents....in my instance the stongly typed Master View is generic which gives me some flexibility with regards to strongly typed View Pages
ViewMasterPage<AdminViewModel>
AdminViewModel
{
SomeImportantObjectThatWasInSession ImportantObject
}
AdminViewModel<TModel> : AdminViewModel where TModel : class
{
TModel Content
}
and then...
ViewPage<AdminViewModel<U>>
If you are using asp.net mvc, here is a simple way to access the session.
From a Controller:
{Controller}.ControllerContext.HttpContext.Session["{name}"]
From a View:
<%=Session["{name}"] %>
This is definitely not the best way to access your session variables, but it is a direct route. So use it with caution (preferably during rapid prototyping), and use a Wrapper/Container and OnSessionStart when it becomes appropriate.
HTH
Although I don't know about asp.net mvc, but this is what we should do in a normal .net website. It should work for asp.net mvc also.
YourSessionClass obj=Session["key"] as YourSessionClass;
if(obj==null){
obj=new YourSessionClass();
Session["key"]=obj;
}
You would put this inside a method for easy access.
HTH
There are 3 ways to do it.
You can directly access HttpContext.Current.Session
You can Mock HttpContextBase
Create a extension method for HttpContextBase
I prefer 3rd way.This link is good reference.
Get/Set HttpContext Session Methods in BaseController vs Mocking HttpContextBase to create Get/Set methods
My way of accessing sessions is to write a helper class which encapsulates the various field names and their types. I hope this example helps:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Web;
using System.Web.SessionState;
namespace dmkp
{
/// <summary>
/// Encapsulates the session state
/// </summary>
public sealed class LoginInfo
{
private HttpSessionState _session;
public LoginInfo(HttpSessionState session)
{
this._session = session;
}
public string Username
{
get { return (this._session["Username"] ?? string.Empty).ToString(); }
set { this._session["Username"] = value; }
}
public string FullName
{
get { return (this._session["FullName"] ?? string.Empty).ToString(); }
set { this._session["FullName"] = value; }
}
public int ID
{
get { return Convert.ToInt32((this._session["UID"] ?? -1)); }
set { this._session["UID"] = value; }
}
public UserAccess AccessLevel
{
get { return (UserAccess)(this._session["AccessLevel"]); }
set { this._session["AccessLevel"] = value; }
}
}
}
Great answers from the guys but I would caution you against always relying on the Session. It is quick and easy to do so, and of course would work but would not be great in all cicrumstances.
For example if you run into a scenario where your hosting doesn't allow session use, or if you are on a web farm, or in the example of a shared SharePoint application.
If you wanted a different solution you could look at using an IOC Container such as Castle Windsor, creating a provider class as a wrapper and then keeping one instance of your class using the per request or session lifestyle depending on your requirements.
The IOC would ensure that the same instance is returned each time.
More complicated yes, if you need a simple solution just use the session.
Here are some implementation examples below out of interest.
Using this method you could create a provider class along the lines of:
public class CustomClassProvider : ICustomClassProvider
{
public CustomClassProvider(CustomClass customClass)
{
CustomClass = customClass;
}
public string CustomClass { get; private set; }
}
And register it something like:
public void Install(IWindsorContainer container, IConfigurationStore store)
{
container.Register(
Component.For<ICustomClassProvider>().UsingFactoryMethod(
() => new CustomClassProvider(new CustomClass())).LifestylePerWebRequest());
}
You can use ViewModelBase as base class for all models , this class will take care of pulling data from session
class ViewModelBase
{
public User CurrentUser
{
get { return System.Web.HttpContext.Current.Session["user"] as User };
set
{
System.Web.HttpContext.Current.Session["user"]=value;
}
}
}
You can write a extention method on HttpContextBase to deal with session data
T FromSession<T>(this HttpContextBase context ,string key,Action<T> getFromSource=null)
{
if(context.Session[key]!=null)
{
return (T) context.Session[key];
}
else if(getFromSource!=null)
{
var value = getFromSource();
context.Session[key]=value;
return value;
}
else
return null;
}
Use this like below in controller
User userData = HttpContext.FromSession<User>("userdata",()=> { return user object from service/db });
The second argument is optional it will be used fill session data for that key when value is not present in session.

Resources