I'm developing an user tracking solution using SignalR, as a fun project to learn SignalR, for ASP.NET MVC applications.
Currently i can track logged users and how long are they on a specific page. If they move to another page i track that also and the timer that SignalR is updating resets... Many other features are implemented or partially implemented.
The problem i'm facing is how to get the full url Controller/Action/Parameters
inside SignalR hub?
When i use HttpContext.Current.Request.Url the url is always /signalr/connect.
NOTE:
var hub = $.connection.myHub;
$.connection.hub.start();
is in the _Layout.cshtml.
UPDATE:
I've tried to use
var location = '#HttpContext.Current.Request.Url';
var hub = $.connection.myHub;
$.connection.hub.start().done(function () {
hub.setLocation(location);
});
And the location is passed correctly but I need it on the Connect() task not later.
Is it possible to do this?
UPDATE 2:
This approach doesn't work
var hub = $.connection.myHub;
$.connection.hub.start(function(){hub.setLocation(location)});
as the Connect() is called before.
In my hub i have several methods but i would like pass a value (in my case a location) to the Connect(), is that possible?
public class MyHub : Hub, IDisconnect, IConnected
{
public Task Connect()
{
//do stuff here
//and i would like to have the **location** value
}
public Task Disconnect()
{
//do stuff here
}
}
Update 3
Use QueryString to pass data before the Connect() occurs.
var location = '#HttpContext.Current.Request.Url';
var hub = $.connection.myHub;
$.connection.hub.qs = "location= + location;
$.connection.hub.start();
Passing data like your location value to Connect() is possible via a querystring parameter: SignalR: How to send data to IConnected.Connect()
Using query-string is not very secure, cause a hacker can forge JS code and send you wrong location breaking whatever logic you have behind it.
You can try to get this from owin-enviromment variables
var underlyingHttpContext =
Context.Request.Environment[typeof(HttpContextBase).FullName] as HttpContextBase;
Then extract whatever you need.
It will work on IIS, for non-IIS hosting look for other OWIN stuff https://github.com/aspnet/AspNetKatana/wiki/OWIN-Keys
You could pass it from your client js call to your hub as a parameter.
Related
So, I'm trying to create a sample where there are the following components/features:
A hangfire server OWIN self-hosted from a Windows Service
SignalR notifications when jobs are completed
Github Project
I can get the tasks queued and performed, but I'm having a hard time sorting out how to then notify the clients (all currently, just until I get it working well) of when the task/job is completed.
My current issue is that I want the SignalR hub to be located in the "core" library SampleCore, but I don't see how to "register it" when starting the webapp SampleWeb. One way I've gotten around that is to create a hub class NotificationHubProxy that inherits the actual hub and that works fine for simple stuff (sending messages from one client to all).
In NotifyTaskComplete, I believe I can get the hub context and then send the message like so:
private void NotifyTaskComplete(int taskId)
{
try
{
var hubContext = GlobalHost.ConnectionManager.GetHubContext<NotificationHub>();
if (hubContext != null)
{
hubContext.Clients.All.sendMessage(string.Format("Task {0} completed.", taskId));
}
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
}
}
BUT, I can't do that if NotificationHubProxy is the class being used as it's part of the SampleWeb library and referencing it from SampleCore would lead to a circular reference.
I know the major issue is the hub in the external assembly, but I can't for the life of me find a relevant sample that's using SignalR or MVC5 or setup in this particular way.
Any ideas?
So, the solution was to do the following two things:
I had to use the SignalR .NET client from the SampleCore assembly to create a HubConnection, to create a HubProxy to "NotificationHub" and use that to Invoke the "SendMessage" method - like so:
private void NotifyTaskComplete(string hostUrl, int taskId)
{
var hubConnection = new HubConnection(hostUrl);
var hub = hubConnection.CreateHubProxy("NotificationHub");
hubConnection.Start().Wait();
hub.Invoke("SendMessage", taskId.ToString()).Wait();
}
BUT, as part of creating that HubConnection - I needed to know the url to the OWIN instance. I decided to pass that a parameter to the task, retrieving it like:
private string GetHostAddress()
{
var request = this.HttpContext.Request;
return string.Format("{0}://{1}", request.Url.Scheme, request.Url.Authority);
}
The solution to having a Hub located in an external assembly is that the assembly needs to be loaded before the SignalR routing is setup, like so:
AppDomain.CurrentDomain.Load(typeof(SampleCore.NotificationHub).Assembly.FullName);
app.MapSignalR();
This solution for this part came from here.
is it possible to execute a server side program and get the output asynchronously.
i have this code that doing the job but synchronously:
suppose a c# program "program.exe" like this :
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
namespace testconsole
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
for (int k = 0; k < 10; k++ )Console.WriteLine(k);
}
}
}
some view in the asp.net app like this :
<script >
function go()
{
var options = {
url: '/excute',
type: 'GET',
dataType: 'json'
}
//make call
$.ajax(options)
.then(function (data) {
console.log(data);
});
}
</script>
<input type="submit" onclick="go();" value="Go">
and the excute controller looks like this :
namespace myApp.Controllers
{
public class ExecuteController : Controller
{
//
// GET: /Execute
[HttpGet]
public JsonResult Index()
{
Process p = new Process();
p.StartInfo.UseShellExecute = false;
p.StartInfo.RedirectStandardOutput = true;
p.StartInfo.FileName = "program.exe";
p.Start();
string output = p.StandardOutput.ReadToEnd();
p.WaitForExit();
return Json(new { op = output }, JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet);
}
}
}
All this is working fine, But ... from the client have to wait till the end of the program to display its outputs, is there any way to get those outputs as soon as they r created?
im sur i need to make some changes in the controller to make it possible, but how ???
Asp.Net MVC has the concept of an Async Controller that is suited to perform long-running tasks. It will help you by not locking a thread while you wait for out program to execute.
But to do what you are after I think you need to create you own Http Handler (probaby by implementing the IHttpHandler interface) that wraps the process and returns the results incrementally. This will not be trivial to do, but it should be possible.
A third viable alternative might be to use SignalR. That would be a fun project, but would still require much work I think.
The problem is primarily with communication between the IIS host process and your external process. You would need to facilitate some sort channel of communication to send "progress" events from the console application into the ASP.NET application.
A WCF client sending information via named pipes to a service hosted in the ASP.NET application would enable you to send messages into the application. You would host the service when the request is made and dynamically generate the name of pipe as a way to correlate to the initial request.
Once you get the updates in the application, you could then use something like SignalR to allow you to push the information back up the client.
Im back finally with an answer (not perfect i suppose). I used SignalR to get this done.
i created a messenger program (with c#) that will be the bridge between an asp.net mvc4 application and any console program that displays outputs.
the messenger will execute the program , then redirect his outputs to be send trough SignalR to the client.
if you are interested i've created a repo at github for this ,check this code here. I hope it will help someone one day.
i will be happy to talk about this code with you.
All the signalR examples shows
<script src="/signalr/hubs" type="text/javascript"></script>
without explainning enough what is it used for .
For the Html page it is a location of folder . and there is no script there.
Why and how this line is being used ?
The /signalr/hubs page is a JavaScript file that is auto generated by SignalR which contains generated hub proxies for every hub in your SignalR project.
For instance (got this from http://shootr.signalr.net/signalr/hubs) lets take a look at the code snippet.
proxies.h = this.createHubProxy('h');
proxies.h.client = { };
proxies.h.server = {
changeViewport: function (viewportWidth, viewportHeight) {
return proxies.h.invoke.apply(proxies.h, $.merge(["changeViewport"], $.makeArray(arguments)));
},
fire: function () {
return proxies.h.invoke.apply(proxies.h, $.merge(["fire"], $.makeArray(arguments)));
},
...
"this" refers to the hub connection, or rather $.connection.hub. So we're essentially saying proxies.h = $.connection.hub.createHubProxy('h');
Now 'h' is a hub on the server See https://github.com/NTaylorMullen/ShootR/blob/master/ShootR/ShootR/Server/GameHub.cs, more specifically look at the hub name attribute.
Next we have proxies.h.client; this is the endpoint for where users are able to declare their client side functions that will be invoked from the server.
We then have proxies.h.server, this references all the public hub methods on the GameHub.cs. So some of the functions are changeViewport, and fire. This code is auto generated on the server to represent each of your hubs.
Lastly at the end of the signalr/hubs file we extend all of the dynamically created hubs onto the $.connection object so users can then access them via
var myGameHub = $.connection.h;
Hope this helps!
Using Signalr (1.0.0-alpha2), I want to know if it is possible to add client functions after a connection has been started.
Say I create my connection and grab the proxy. Then I add some Server Fired client functions to the hub to do a few things. Then I start my connection. I then want to add some more Server Fired functions to my hub object. Is this possible?
var myHub= $.connection.myHub;
myHub.SomeClientFunction = function() {
alert("serverside called 'Clients.SomeClientFunction()'");
};
$.connection.hub.start()
.done(function() {
myHub.SomeNewClientFunction = function() {
alert("serverside called 'Clients.SomeNewClientFunction()'");
}
})
This example is not realistic, but I basically want to send my 'myHub' variable to a different object after the hub is started to subscribe to new events that the original code did not care for.
Real Life Example: A dashboard with a number of different hub events (new site visits, chat message, site error). I 'subscribe' after the connection has started and then pass my hub proxy to all of my different UI components to handle their specific 'message types'. Should I create separate Hubs for these or should I be able to add more Server Fired client functions on the fly?
Yes you can. Use the .on method.
Example:
myHub.on('somethingNew', function() {
alert("This was called after the connection started!");
});
If you want to remove it later on use the .off method.
I have the exact same situation. You might want to consider adding another layout of abstraction if you're trying to call it from multiple places.
Here's a preliminary version of what I've come up with (typescript).
I'll start with the usage. SignalRManager is my 'manager' class that abstracts my debuggingHub hub. I have a client method fooChanged that is triggered on the server.
Somewhere in the module that is using SignalR I just call the start method, which is not re-started if already started.
// ensure signalR is started
SignalRManager.start().done(() =>
{
$.connection.debuggingHub.server.init();
});
Your 'module' simply registers its callback through the manager class and whenever the SignalR client method is triggered your handler is called.
// handler for foo changed
SignalRManager.onFooChanged((guid: string) =>
{
if (this.currentSession().guid == guid)
{
alert('changed');
}
});
This is a simple version of SignalRManager that uses jQuery $.Callbacks to pass on the request to as many modules as you have. Of course you could use any mechanism you wanted, but this seems to be the simplest.
module RR
{
export class SignalRManager
{
// the original promise returned when calling hub.Start
static _start: JQueryPromise<any>;
private static _fooChangedCallback = $.Callbacks();
// add callback for 'fooChanged' callback
static onfooChanged(callback: (guid: string) => any)
{
SignalRManager._fooChangedCallback.add(callback);
}
static start(): JQueryPromise<any>
{
if (!SignalRManager._start)
{
// callback for fooChanged
$.connection.debuggingHub.client.fooChanged = (guid: string) =>
{
console.log('foo Changed ' + guid);
SignalRManager._fooChangedCallback.fire.apply(arguments);
};
// start hub and save the promise returned
SignalRManager._start = $.connection.hub.start().done(() =>
{
console.log('Signal R initialized');
});
}
return SignalRManager._start;
}
}
}
Note: there may be extra work involved to handle disconnections or connections lost.
I heard SignalR is a good messaging library. I got some code for SignalR but I am not able to understand how it works.
JS
var hooking;
$(function() {
hooking = $.connection.hooking;
hooking.removeLead = function(ref) {
$("lead" + ref).remove();
};
$.connection.hub.start();
});
C#
// Hooking.cs (placed in application root)
public class Hooking : Hub
{
public void Submit(string jsonString)
{
var serializer = new JavaScriptSerializer();
var json = serializer.Deserialize<HookingLeadResult>(jsonString);
Clients.removeLead(json.Ref); // Remove lead from client hooking windows
// update lead gen
}
}
I have questions about the above code.
What does hooking mean ins $.connection.hooking;
Where is removeLead in hooking.removeLead
What will this do $.connection.hub.start(); ? What does it start? Which method it will invoke at the server side?
Who & how Submit method will be called at the server side? how to pass data from client side to server side. If possible please give me a url for good start for SignalR library.
The Javascript function hooking.removeLead will be invoked whenever you call Clients.removeLead(). All the bindings are done dynamically, between Javascript to C# and between C# and Javascript.
$.connection.hub.start() is actually the connect function. It will connect your client to the server. No messages can be sent or received until you do. The start function allows you to define a callback to be called when it's done connecting.
The Submit method at the server will be called whenever you do a hooking.submit(json) call on your client. For instance, as a result of the user filling in some form and clicking a button.
I recommend starting with the SignalR official wiki: http://www.asp.net/signalr