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ASP.NET MVC 3 plug-in architecture using Griffin.MvcContrib

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25 Nov 2012CPOL7 min read 66K   50   14
How to create a flexible plugin system with Griffin.MvcContrib.

Introduction

Griffin.MvcContrib is a contribution project for ASP.NET MVC3 which contains different features like extendable HTML Helpers (you can modify the HTML that the existing helpers generate), easy localization support and a quite fresh support for plugin development. The purpose of this article is to provide a step-by-step instruction on how you can develop plugins using Griffin.MvcContrib.

Using the code

The plugin support are based on the Area support which MVC3 got. If you haven't used areas before, I suggest that you start by reading the following article.

Most basic approach.

This first sample is not really a plugin system but only showing how you can move your code to class libraries. The example will only contain one class library to avoid confusion. Start by creating a new ASP.NET MVC3 project (of any kind) and a class library project. For convenience we would like to have support for Razor and all MVC3 wizards in our class library. It helps us add some basic files which are required to get everything working. To get that support we need to modify the project file for the class library. Here is how:

  1. Right-click on the class library project and choose unload project:
  2. Right-click on the project file and select Edit project file


  3. Add the following XML element on a new line below <ProjectGuid>
    <ProjectTypeGuids>{E53F8FEA-EAE0-44A6-8774-FFD645390401};{fae04ec0-301f-11d3-bf4b-00c04f79efbc}</ProjectTypeGuids>  

  4. Save and close the project file.
  5. Right-click and reload the project.


  6. Add reference to "System.Web" and "System.Web.Mvc" (project settings).

You have now told Visual Studio that it should active the tooling and Razor 3 views. We can now add an area by just right-clicking on the project and select "Add Area".

Do so and create an area with a name of your choosing. Create a controller (with an Index action) and a view for the index action. You now got your first external DLL for the MVC project.

Add a reference to the class library from the MVC3 project:

Congratulations. You now got your first "plugin" based solution. Hit F5 to run the project. I named my area "Ohh" and my controller "My" so I surf to "http://theHostNameAndPort/ohh/my" to visit my plugin controller.

Uh oh. We can visit the page alright. But the view cannot be found.

It can be solved thanks to Griffin.MvcContrib. Let's install the project in the MVC3 project:

Then open up global.asax and create a new method which maps the views:

protected void Application_Start()
{ 
    AreaRegistration.RegisterAllAreas();
    RegisterGlobalFilters(GlobalFilters.Filters);
    RegisterRoutes(RouteTable.Routes);
    RegisterViews();
}
protected void RegisterViews()
{
    var embeddedProvider = new EmbeddedViewFileProvider(HostingEnvironment.MapPath("~/"), new ExternalViewFixer());
    embeddedProvider.Add(new NamespaceMapping(typeof(Lib.Areas.Some.Controllers.MyController).Assembly, "BasicPlugins.Lib"));
    GriffinVirtualPathProvider.Current.Add(embeddedProvider);
    HostingEnvironment.RegisterVirtualPathProvider(GriffinVirtualPathProvider.Current);
} 

The first line creates a new file provider which loads files from embedded resources. We tell it which path it should try to provide files for. The next line simply adds our class library assembly and tell which root namespace it has. To make this work, we also have to change our view to an embedded resource:

Everything should be set now.

Hit F5 and visit the area controller again. You should see the view now.

You can also try to have a break point in the class library. Debugging should work just like it used to. There is still one "problem". We can't modify the views at runtime, we need to recompile the project each time we adjust a view. Fortunually for us, Griffin.MvcContrib can solve that too. Open the RegisterViews method in global.asax again. Let's add a disk file provider. It should be added before the embedded provider since the first found file will be used.

var diskLocator = new DiskFileLocator();
diskLocator.Add("~/", Path.GetFullPath(Server.MapPath("~/") + @"..\BasicPlugins.Lib\"));
var viewProvider = new ViewFileProvider(diskLocator);
GriffinVirtualPathProvider.Current.Add(viewProvider);  

You can now edit the views at runtime.

Building a plugin system

The last part showed you how you can put Controllers, Models and Views in class libraries. It's quite useful as long as you don't want to develop features in a more loosely coupled and dynamic way. This section will suggest a structure which you can use when building plugins.

The following part expects you to have used inversion of control containers in the past. The container is used to provide the application extension points to all plugins. I prefer using a container which has a module system so that each plugin can take care of all it's registrations itself. I'm using Autofac in this article and it's Module extension.

Let's place all code which is shared between the plugins and the MVC3 project in a seperate class library. You could also follow follow the Separated interface pattern and only define all interfaces in that project. Thus removing all direct dependencies between the plugins and the main application.

The last thing to remember is that the default route configuration doesn't work very well if you have controllers with the same name in different areas. To overcome that you have to manually change all route mappings to include the namespace. Also remove the "_default" from the route name.

Modified registration:

public override void RegisterArea(AreaRegistrationContext context)
{
	context.MapRoute(
		"Messaging_default",
		"Messaging/{controller}/{action}/{id}",
		new { action = "Index", id = UrlParameter.Optional },
		new[] { GetType().Namespace + ".Controllers" }
	);
}

Create a new class library named something like "YourApp.PluginBase" and add our basic extension points:

public interface IRouteRegistrar
{
	void Register(RouteTable routes);
}

Used to register any custom routes.

public interface IMenuRegistrar
{
	void Register(IMenuWithChildren mainMenu);
}

Allows the plugins to register themselves in the main application menu.

We'll just use those two extensions in this example. Feel free to add as many extensions as you like in your own project Wink | <img src= " src="http://www.codeproject.com/script/Forums/Images/smiley_wink.gif" />

The structure

We'll need to have some structure for the plugins so that the can easily be managed, both during development and in production. All plugins will therefore be placed in a sub directory called "Plugins". Something like:

ProjectName\Plugins\
ProjectName\Plugins\PluginName
ProjectName\Plugins\PluginName\Plugin.PluginName
ProjectName\Plugins\PluginName\Plugin.PluginName.Tests
ProjectName\ProjectName.Mvc3 

Add a new solution folder by right-clicking on the solution folder in the Solution Explorer. Do note that solution folders doesn't exist on the disk and you'll therefore have to manually append the folder to the location text box each time you add a new project in it.

Right-click on the Plugins folder in Solution Explorer and add a new project named "PluginName". Don't forget to append \Plugins\Plugin.Name\ to the location text box.

Since we this time don't want to have any references to the plugins from the main application we have to manually copy them to the main application plugin folder. We use a post build event for that. Don't forget to copy in all dependencies that your project has, since nothing handles that for you (the price of having no direct references from the MVC3 project to the plugins).

Complete structure:

Menu items

Keep in mind that you can not unload plugins and that they are available for all users. The easiest way to come around that is to display menu items only if the user has a role, which means that you should create one (or more) role(s) per plugin (if the plugin should not be available for all users). Griffin.MvcContrib contains a basic menu implementation which allows you to control if menu items are visible or not.

Sample code:

var item = new RouteMenuItem("mnuMyPluginIndex", "List messages", new { 
        controller = "Home", 
        action = "Index", 
        area = "Messages"});
item.Role = "MessageViewer";
menuRegistrar.Add(item);

You can later use menuItem.IsVisible when you generate the menu to determine if the item should be included or not.

Hello container

For this exercise we'll use Autofac as the container. It contains a nifty module system which aids us in keeping the projects loosely coupled. Each plugin need to create a class which inherits from Autofac.Module and use that class to register all services which the plugin provides. Thanks to that we'll just have to scan all plugin assemblies after any container modules and invoke them with our container.

public class ContainerModule : Module
{
	protected override void Load(ContainerBuilder builder)
	{
		builder.RegisterType<MenuRegistrar>().AsImplementedInterfaces().SingleInstance();
		builder.RegisterType<HelloService>().AsImplementedInterfaces().InstancePerLifetimeScope();
		base.Load(builder);
	}
}

The plugins are loaded from the main application using the following snippet:

var moduleType = typeof (IModule);
var modules = plugin.GetTypes().Where(moduleType.IsAssignableFrom);
foreach (var module in modules)
{
	var mod = (IModule) Activator.CreateInstance(module);
	builder.RegisterModule(mod);
}

Views during development

Since we want to be able to modify views at runtime during development we have to tell ASP.NET MVC3 where it can find our plugin views. We do this by using GriffinVirtualPathProvider and a custom file locator which looks like this:

public class PluginFileLocator : IViewFileLocator
{
    public PluginFileLocator()
    {
        _basePath = Path.GetFullPath(HostingEnvironment.MapPath("~") + @"..\Plugins\");
    }

    public string GetFullPath(string uri)
    {
        var fixedUri = uri;
        if (fixedUri.StartsWith("~"))
            fixedUri = VirtualPathUtility.ToAbsolute(uri);
        if (!fixedUri.StartsWith("/Areas", StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase))
            return null;

        // extract area name:
        var pos = fixedUri.IndexOf('/', 7);
        if (pos == -1)
            return null;
        var areaName = fixedUri.Substring(7, pos - 7);

        var path = string.Format("{0}{1}\\Plugin.{1}{2}", _basePath, areaName, fixedUri.Replace('/', '\\'));
        return File.Exists(path) ? path : null;
    }
}

It simply takes the requested uri and converts it using the naming standard I described above. Everything else is taken care of by Griffin.MvcContrib.

And interesting part is that the provider is only loaded during development thanks to nifty helper class in Griffin.MvcContrib:

if (VisualStudioHelper.IsInVisualStudio)
    GriffinVirtualPathProvider.Current.Add(_diskFileProvider);

Loading the plugins

Ok. We've created some plugins (and their dependencies) which are copied to the bin folder with a post build event. We'll therefore have to load them in some way. To do this we create a new class looking like this:

public class PluginService
{
    private static PluginFinder _finder;
    private readonly DiskFileLocator _diskFileLocator = new DiskFileLocator();
    private readonly EmbeddedViewFileProvider _embededProvider =
        new EmbeddedViewFileProvider(new ExternalViewFixer());
    private readonly PluginFileLocator _fileLocator = new PluginFileLocator();
    private readonly ViewFileProvider _diskFileProvider;

    public PluginService()
    {
        _diskFileProvider = new ViewFileProvider(_fileLocator, new ExternalViewFixer());

        if (VisualStudioHelper.IsInVisualStudio)
            GriffinVirtualPathProvider.Current.Add(_diskFileProvider);

        GriffinVirtualPathProvider.Current.Add(_embededProvider);
    }


    public static void PreScan()
    {
        _finder = new PluginFinder("~/bin/");
        _finder.Find();
    }

    public void Startup(ContainerBuilder builder)
    {
        foreach (var assembly in _finder.Assemblies)
        {
            // Views handling
            _embededProvider.Add(new NamespaceMapping(assembly, Path.GetFileNameWithoutExtension(assembly.Location)));
            _diskFileLocator.Add("~/",
                                 Path.GetFullPath(HostingEnvironment.MapPath("~/") + @"\..\..\" +
                                                  Path.GetFileNameWithoutExtension(assembly.Location)));

            //Autofac integration
            builder.RegisterControllers(assembly);
            var moduleType = typeof (IModule);
            var modules = assembly.GetTypes().Where(moduleType.IsAssignableFrom);
            foreach (var module in modules)
            {
                var mod = (IModule) Activator.CreateInstance(module);
                builder.RegisterModule(mod);
            }
        }
    }

    // invoke extension points
    public void Integrate(IContainer container)
    {
        foreach (var registrar in container.Resolve<IEnumerable<IMenuRegistrar>>())
        {
            registrar.Register(MainMenu.Current);
        }

        foreach (var registrar in container.Resolve<IEnumerable<IRouteRegistrar>>())
        {
            registrar.Register(RouteTable.Routes);
        }
    }
}

The plugins are now loaded and the extension points have been passed to them.

Final touch

The last thing to change is global.asax:

protected void Application_Start()
{
    AreaRegistration.RegisterAllAreas();

    RegisterGlobalFilters(GlobalFilters.Filters);
    RegisterRoutes(RouteTable.Routes);

    _pluginServicee = new PluginService();
    RegisterContainer();
    HostingEnvironment.RegisterVirtualPathProvider(GriffinVirtualPathProvider.Current);
    _pluginServicee.Integrate(_container);
}

private void RegisterContainer()
{
    var builder = new ContainerBuilder();
    builder.RegisterControllers(Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly());
    _pluginServicee.Startup(builder);
    _container = builder.Build();
    DependencyResolver.SetResolver(new AutofacDependencyResolver(_container));
}

History

  • 2012-05-24 First revision
  • 2012-11-26 Fixed the ProjectTypeGuid formatting 

Code 

The code for the samples are located in github and so is Griffin.MvcContrib. Griffin.MvcContrib can also be install from nuget.

License

This article, along with any associated source code and files, is licensed under The Code Project Open License (CPOL)


Written By
Founder 1TCompany AB
Sweden Sweden

Comments and Discussions

 
Questionplugin routes Pin
Member 326587430-Nov-12 4:22
Member 326587430-Nov-12 4:22 
AnswerRe: plugin routes Pin
jgauffin7-Dec-12 1:49
jgauffin7-Dec-12 1:49 
SuggestionVisualStudioHelper.IsInVisualStudio only works when started debugging Pin
hieronymusk27-Nov-12 2:17
hieronymusk27-Nov-12 2:17 
SuggestionCopying plugin dll on publish (msdeploy) Pin
hieronymusk26-Nov-12 23:15
hieronymusk26-Nov-12 23:15 
GeneralThis method cannot be called during the application's pre-start initialization stage. Pin
hieronymusk23-Nov-12 4:56
hieronymusk23-Nov-12 4:56 
SuggestionMost basic approach errors Pin
hieronymusk23-Nov-12 2:29
hieronymusk23-Nov-12 2:29 
GeneralRe: Most basic approach errors Pin
jgauffin23-Nov-12 2:31
jgauffin23-Nov-12 2:31 
Questionprojecttypeguids should be CamelCase Pin
hieronymusk23-Nov-12 1:56
hieronymusk23-Nov-12 1:56 
AnswerRe: projecttypeguids should be CamelCase Pin
jgauffin25-Nov-12 19:16
jgauffin25-Nov-12 19:16 
GeneralMy vote of 5 Pin
P.Salini4-Jun-12 19:18
P.Salini4-Jun-12 19:18 
Very Nice.
Questionhi Pin
shalinibharani1-Jun-12 1:18
shalinibharani1-Jun-12 1:18 
Questionhi Pin
shalinibharani1-Jun-12 1:15
shalinibharani1-Jun-12 1:15 
GeneralMy vote of 1 Pin
eddy morrison22-May-12 2:13
eddy morrison22-May-12 2:13 
GeneralMy vote of 5 Pin
Yingbiao17-May-12 16:41
Yingbiao17-May-12 16:41 

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