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European ASP.NET MVC 5 Hosting - UK :: Tips Improving Your ASP.NET MVC Codebase

clock October 27, 2014 10:05 by author Scott

Some of you sometimes think why your application eat up until 1 GB-2GB memory on production server. After looking through the code, doing some profiling, maybe shaking your head a bit, you've figured out what the issue is and now you need to give some feedback.

In this tutorial, I will show some tips that you can follow to reduce your memory usage on production server and keep your ASP.NET MVC codebase working as you’d expect.

1. Understand the queries in your problem domain

The root cause of the support ticket I received was a simple case of fetching too much data from the database, causing obscene amounts of memory usage.

It's a common enough issue. You're building a simple blog, it has posts and it has media (images, videos, attachments). You put a Media array onto your Post domain object. Your Media domain object has all the image data stored in a byte array. Since you're using an ORM, there's a certain way you need to design your domain model to play nice; we've all experienced this.

public class BlogPost {
    public ICollection<BlogMedia> Media { get; set; }
}
public class BlogMedia {
    public byte[] Data { get; set; }
    public string Name { get; set; }
}

There's nothing absolutely wrong with this design. You've modeled your domain accurately. The problem is, when you issue a query through your favorite ORM, it eagerly loads all the data associated with your blog post:

public IList<BlogPost> GetNewestPosts(int take) {
    return _db.BlogPosts.OrderByDescending(p => p.PostDate).Take(take).ToList();
}

A seemingly innocuous line (unless you've been bitten), a sneaky monster is lying in wait with big consequences if you haven't disabled lazy loading or didn't tell your ORM to ignore that big Data property on blog media.

It's important to understand how your ORM queries and maps objects and make sure you only query what you need (for example using projection).

public IList<PostSummary> GetNewestPosts(int take) {
    return _db.BlogPosts.OrderByDescending(p => p.PostDate).Take(take).Select(p => new PostSummary() {
        Title = p.Title,
        Id = p.Id
    }).ToList();
}

This ensures we only grab the amount of data we really need for the task.

It's OK to have more than 5 methods on a repository; be as granular as you need to be for your UI.

2. Don't call your repositories from your views

Consider this line in an MVC view:

@foreach(var post in Model.RelatedPosts) {
    ...
}

It seems innocent enough. But if we take a look at what exactly that model property is hiding:

public class MyViewModel {

    public IList<BlogPost> RelatedPosts {
        get { return new BlogRepository().GetRelatedPosts(this.Tags); }
    }

}

Your "view model" has business logic in it on top of calling a data access method directly. Now you've introduced data access code somewhere it doesn't belong and hidden it inside a property. Move that into the controller so you can wrangle it in and populate the view model conciously.

This is a good opportunity to point out that implementing proper unit tests would uncover issues like this; because you definitely can't intercept calls to something like that and then you'd realize injecting a repository into a view model is probably not something you want to be doing.

3. Use partials and child actions to your advantage

If you need to perform business logic in a view, that should be a sign you need to revisit your view model and logic. I don't think it's advisable to do this in your MVC Razor view:

@{
    var blogController = new BlogController();
}

<ul>
@foreach(var tag in blogController.GetTagsForPost(p.Id)) {
    <li>@tag.Name</li>
}
</ul>

Putting business logic in the view is a no-no, but on top of that you're creating acontroller! Move that into your action method and use that view model you made for what it's intended for. You can also move that logic into a separate action method that only gets called inside views so you can cache it separately if needed.

//In the controller:

[ChildActionOnly]
[OutputCache(Duration=2000)]
public ActionResult TagsForPost(int postId) {
    return View();
}

//In the view:

@{Html.RenderAction("TagsForPost", new { postId = p.Id });}

Notice the ChildActionOnly attribute. From MSDN:

Any method that is marked with ChildActionOnlyAttribute can be called only with the Action or RenderAction HTML extension methods.

This means people can't see your child action by manipulating the URL (if you're using the default route).

Partial views and child actions are useful tools in the MVC arsenal; use them to your advantage!

4. Cache what matters

Given the code smells above, what do you think will happen if you only cached your view model?

public ActionResult Index() {
    var homepageViewModel = HttpContext.Current.Cache["homepageModel"] as HomepageViewModel;

    if (homepageViewModel == null) {
        homepageViewModel = new HomepageViewModel();
        homepageViewModel.RecentPosts = _blogRepository.GetNewestPosts(5);

        HttpContext.Current.Cache.Add("homepageModel", homepageViewModel, ...);

    }

    return View(homepageViewModel);
}

Nothing! There will not be any performance gain because you're accessing the data layer through a controller variable in the view and through a property in the view model... caching the view model won't help anything.

Instead, consider caching the output of the MVC action instead:

[OutputCache(Duration=2000)]
public ActionResult Index() {
    var homepageViewModel = new HomepageViewModel();

    homepageViewModel.RecentPosts = _blogRepository.GetNewestPosts(5);

    return View(homepageViewModel);
}

Notice the handy OutputCache attribute. MVC supports ASP.NET Output Caching; use it to your advantage when it applies. If you are going to cache the model, your model needs to essentially be a POCO with automatic (and read-only) properties... not something that calls other repository methods.

Conclusion

I hope with tutorial above, it will help you to minimize your memory usage on the server.

 



European ASP.NET MVC 5 Cloud Hosting - Austria :: Implementation ASP.NET MVC 5 Authentication Filters

clock June 5, 2014 09:01 by author Scott

ASP.NET MVC 5 offer many great new features. In today post, I will share one of the new ASP.NET MVC 5 feature which is called Authentication Filters and ASP.NET identity Management. ASP.NET MVC does not provide any built-in authentication filter(s). However it provides you with the framework, so you can easily create your own custom authentication filters.

 

In previous ASP.NET MVC 4, maybe you use AuthorizationFilters. New authentication filters run prior to authorization filters. It is also worth noting that these filters are the very first filters to run before any other filters get executed.

Why Use Authentication Filters?

Prior to authentication filters, developers used the Authorization filters to drive some of the authentication tasks for the current request. It was convenient because the Authorization filters were executed prior to any other action filters.  For example, before the request routes to action execution, we would use an Authorization filter to redirect an unauthenticated user to a login page. Another example would be to use the Authorization filter to set a new authentication principal, which is different from the application’s original principal in context.

Authentication related tasks can now be separated out to a new custom authentication filter and authorization related tasks can be performed using authorization filters. So it is basically about separating of concerns, while giving developers more flexibility to drive authentication using ASP.NET MVC infrastructure.

The Implementation ASP.NET MVC Authentication Filters

If you've done any development with ASP .NET MVC, you've more than likely used the Authorization attribute to enforce role-based security within your Web site. With MVC 5, you can now apply an Authentication filters to your controller to allow users to authenticate to your site from various third-party vendors or a custom authentication provider.

When applied to an entire controller class or a particular controller action, Authentication filters are applied prior to any Authorization filters. Let's see an Authentication filter in practice. Create a new C# ASP .NET Web Application, see Figure below.

Then, select ASP.NET project type.

Let's first look at how to implement a custom authentication filter that will simply redirect the user back to the login page if they're not authenticated. Create a new directory named CustomAttributes in your project. Next, create a new class named CustomAttribute that inherits from ActionFilterAttribute and IAuthenticationFilter:

public class BasicAuthAttribute: ActionFilterAttribute, IAuthenticationFilter

The IAuthenticationFilter interface defines two methods: OnAuthentication and OnAuthenhenticationChallenge. The OnAuthentication method is executed first and can be used to perform any needed authentication. The OnAuthenticationChallenge method is used to restrict access based upon the authenticated user's principal.

 For this simple example, I'll only be implementing the OnAuthenticationChallenge method and will leave the OnAuthenitcation method blank:

public void OnAuthenticationChallenge(AuthenticationChallengeContext filterContext)
{
    var user = filterContext.HttpContext.User;
    if (user == null || !user.Identity.IsAuthenticated)
    {
        filterContext.Result = new HttpUnauthorizedResult();
    }
}

Here's the complete BasicAuthAttribute implementation:

using System.Web.Mvc;
using System.Web.Mvc.Filters;

namespace VSMMvc5AuthFilterDemo.CustomAttributes
{
    public class BasicAuthAttribute : ActionFilterAttribute, IAuthenticationFilter
    {
        public void OnAuthentication(AuthenticationContext filterContext)
        {
        }

        public void OnAuthenticationChallenge(AuthenticationChallengeContext filterContext)
        {
            var user = filterContext.HttpContext.User;
            if (user == null || !user.Identity.IsAuthenticated)
            {
                filterContext.Result = new HttpUnauthorizedResult();
            }
        }
    }
}

You can now test out the BasicAuthAttribute by applying it to the HomeController class. Open up the HomeController class file, then add a using statement for your CustomAttributes namespace:

using VSMMvc5AuthFilterDemo.CustomAttributes;

Then apply the custom attribute to the HomeController class:

[BasicAuthAttribute]
public class HomeController : Controller

When you run the application, you should now be automatically redirected to the login page

In order to view the homepage, you must register a user account

Once your user is registered, you'll be automatically redirected to the homepage

As you can see, it isn't overly complex to implement a custom authentication filter within ASP.NET MVC 5.

Summary

The new IAuthenticationFilter provides a great ability to customize authentication within an ASP.NET MVC 5 application. This provides a clear separation between authentication and authorization filters. OnAuthentication and OnAuthenticationChallenge methods provide greater extensibility points to customize authentication within ASP.NET MVC framework. We also looked at a sample usage of CustomAuthentication attribute and how you can use to change the current principal and redirect un authenticated user to a login page.



European ASP.NET MVC 5 Hosting - Nederland :: How to Fix SimpleSecurity Error when Upgrading from MVC 4 to MVC 5

clock February 28, 2014 06:56 by author Scott

You will face this weird issue when you upgrade SimpleSecurity from MVC 4 to MVC 5 and this is an issue that you’ll see:

Attempt by security transparent method 'WebMatrix.WebData.PreApplicationStartCode.Start()' to access security critical method 'System.Web.WebPages.Razor.WebPageRazorHost.AddGlobalImport(System.String)' failed.

I did some research and found that others were having the same issue. Well it turns out I did not follow the instructions exactly.  Here is one note in the instructions I did not pay close attention to.

Note
: Microsoft-Web-Helpers has been replaced  with Microsoft.AspNet.WebHelpers. You should remove the old package first,  and then install the newer package.


I opened up the NuGet Package Manager and installed the package Microsoft.AspNet.WebHelpers and things started to work.  Note that when you create a new MVC 5 application and try to incorporate SimpleSecurity or SimpleMembership you will hit the same issue because Microsoft.AspNet.WebHelpers  is not installed by default.  It has to be present for SimpleMembership to run correctly.

I verified that all of the features in the reference application are working correctly after the upgrade.  Even the generation of the emails using Postal worked, which I was not sure of because of the upgrade of Razor as well.

One change I needed to make to the SimpleSecurity assembly was to remove the filters AuthorizeAttribute and BasicAuthorizeAttribute and put them in a separate assembly.  I did this because they are dependent upon MVC and Web API assemblies.  So now there is a version for MVC 4 and another for MVC 5. Please check https://simplesecurity.codeplex.com/SourceControl/latest for SimpleSecurity Project Source Code. Hope it helps



European ASP.NET MVC 5 Hosting :: Upgrade ASP .NET MVC 5 default layout to bootstrap 3

clock December 20, 2013 06:58 by author Patrick

If you have started developing web applications with ASP .NET MVC 5 you might have noticed that it comes with bootstrap version 2 and the latest version 3. In order to upgrade the default template for version 3, you can use these files as a reference.

Right click solution -> Manage NuGet packages Updates -> Update bootstrap to version 3 >

***Views/Shared/_Layout.cshtml***

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
    <meta charset="utf-8" />
    <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
    <title>@ViewBag.Title - My ASP.NET Application</title>
    @Styles.Render("~/Content/css")
    @Scripts.Render("~/bundles/modernizr")
</head>
<body>
    <div class="navbar navbar-default navbar-static-top">
        <div class="container">
            <div class="navbar-header">
                <button type="button" class="navbar-toggle" data-toggle="collapse" data-target=".navbar-collapse">
                    <span class="icon-bar"></span>
                    <span class="icon-bar"></span>
                    <span class="icon-bar"></span>
                </button>
                @Html.ActionLink("Application name", "Index", "Home", null, new { @class = "navbar-brand" })
            </div>
                           @Html.Partial("_LoginPartial")
            <div class="navbar-collapse collapse">
                <ul class="nav navbar-nav">
                    <li class="active">@Html.ActionLink("Home", "Index", "Home")</li>
                    <li>@Html.ActionLink("About", "About", "Home")</li>
                    <li>@Html.ActionLink("Contact", "Contact", "Home")</li>
                    <li class="dropdown">
                        <a href="#" class="dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown">Dropdown <b class="caret"></b></a>
                        <ul class="dropdown-menu">
                            <li><a href="#">Action</a></li>
                            <li><a href="#">Another action</a></li>
                            <li><a href="#">Something else here</a></li>
                            <li class="divider"></li>
                            <li class="dropdown-header">Nav header</li>
                            <li><a href="#">Separated link</a></li>
                            <li><a href="#">One more separated link</a></li>
                        </ul>
                    </li>
                </ul>
            </div><!--/.nav-collapse -->
        </div>
    </div>
    <div class="container">
        @RenderBody()
        <hr />
        <footer>
            <p>&copy; @DateTime.Now.Year - My ASP.NET Application</p>
        </footer>
    </div>
    @Scripts.Render("~/bundles/jquery")
    @Scripts.Render("~/bundles/bootstrap")
    @RenderSection("scripts", required: false)
</body>
</html>

 

***Views/Shared/_LoginPartial.cshtml***

@using Microsoft.AspNet.Identity
@if (Request.IsAuthenticated)
{
    using (Html.BeginForm("LogOff", "Account", FormMethod.Post, new { id = "logoutForm", @class = "navbar-form pull-right" }))
    {
    @Html.AntiForgeryToken()
    <ul class="nav navbar-nav navbar-right">
        <li>
            @Html.ActionLink("Hello " + User.Identity.GetUserName() + "!", "Manage", "Account", routeValues: null, htmlAttributes: new { title = "Manage" })
        </li>
        <li><a href="javascript:document.getElementById('logoutForm').submit()">Log off</a></li>
    </ul>
    }
}
else
{
    <ul class="nav navbar-nav navbar-right">
        <li>@Html.ActionLink("Register", "Register", "Account", routeValues: null, htmlAttributes: new { id
= "registerLink" })</li>
        <li>@Html.ActionLink("Log in", "Login", "Account", routeValues: null, htmlAttributes: new { id =
"loginLink" })</li>
    </ul>
}

 



European ASP.NET MVC 5 Hosting :: Introducing ASP.Net SignalR in MVC 5

clock December 17, 2013 05:29 by author Patrick

In this article I am using the ASP.NET SignalR library in the latest MVC 5 project template. Now, what is this real-time functionality? It is used to access the server code and push the content to the connected clients instantly instead of the server waiting for the client's request.

Prerequisites

Using Visual Studio 2013. There are some prerequisites to develop the application:

  • Visual Studio 2010 SP1 or Visual Studio 2012.
  • ASP.NET and Web Tools 2012.2

Let's create an application for SignalR development using the following sections:

  • MVC 5 Application
  • Code Execution

MVC 5 Application

Step 1: Open Visual Studio 2013 and create a New Project.

Step 2: Select MVC project template.

Step 3: Open the Package Manager Console.

And write the following command:

install-package Microsoft.AspNet.SignalR

Step 4: You can see in your Solution Explorer that the SignalR was successfully added to your application.

Step 5: Add a new folder named Hubs in your application and add a class in it.

Give the name of your class ChatHub as shown below:

Step 6: Add the following code in the class:

using Microsoft.AspNet.SignalR;
namespace SignalRDemo.Hubs
{
    public class ChatHub : Hub
    {
        public void  LetsChat(string Cl_Name, string Cl_Message)
        {
            Clients.All.NewMessage(Cl_Name, Cl_Message);
        }
    }
}
Step 7: Open the Global.asax file and modify the Applicatio_Start() method as shown below:
public class MvcApplication : System.Web.HttpApplication
{
    protected void Application_Start()
    {
        RouteTable.Routes.MapHubs();
        AreaRegistration.RegisterAllAreas();
        FilterConfig.RegisterGlobalFilters(GlobalFilters.Filters);
        RouteConfig.RegisterRoutes(RouteTable.Routes);
        BundleConfig.RegisterBundles(BundleTable.Bundles);
    }
}

Step 8:
Open your HomeController.cs file and modify it as shown below:
public ActionResult Contact()
{
    ViewBag.Message = "Your contact page."
    return View();
}
public ActionResult Chat()
{
    ViewBag.Message = "Your chat page";
    return View();
}

Step 9: Generate the view for the Chat method as shown in the following parts:

Select Home folder and right-click to add Scaffold

(m8)

Select MVC 5 View in the Add Scaffold wizard

Do as directed in the following image:

Step 10: Add the following code in the Chat.cshtml file:
@{
    ViewBag.Title = "Chat";
}
<hgroup>
    <h2>@ViewBag.Title.</h2>
    <h3>@ViewBag.Message</h3>
</hgroup>
<div class="container">
    <input type="text" id="TxtMessage" />
    <input type="button" id="BtnSend" value="Send" />
    <input type="hidden" id="UserName" />
    <ul id="Chats"></ul>
</div>
@section scripts {
    <script src="~/Scripts/jquery.signalR-1.1.3.js"></script>
    <script src="~/signalr/Hubs"></script>
    <script
        $(function () {
            var chat = $.connection.chatHub;
            chat.client.NewMessage=function(Cl_Name, Cl_Message) {
                $('#Chats').append('<li><strong>' + htmlEncode(Cl_Name)
                    + '</strong>: ' + htmlEncode(Cl_Message) + '</li>');
            };
            $('#UserName').val(prompt('Please Enter Your Name:', ''));
            $('#TxtMessage').focus();
            $.connection.hub.start().done(function () {
                $('#BtnSend').click(function () {
                    chat.server.LetsChat($('#UserName').val(), $('#TxtMessage').val())
                    $('#TxtMessage').val('').focus()
                });
            });
        });
        function htmlEncode(value) {
            var encodedValue = $('<div />').text(value).html();
            return encodedValue;
        }
    </script>
}

Code Execution

Save all your application and debug the application. Use the following procedure.

Step 1: Debug your application. Open /Home/Chat in your browser like: http://localhost:12345/Home/Chat
Step 2: Enter your name in the prompt
Step 3: Enter message and send
Step 4: Copy the browser URL and open more browsers, paste the URL in the address bar and do the same thing as above.



European ASP.NET MVC 5 Hosting :: Introducing ASP.Net SignalR in MVC 5

clock December 17, 2013 05:29 by author Patrick

In this article I am using the ASP.NET SignalR library in the latest MVC 5 project template. Now, what is this real-time functionality? It is used to access the server code and push the content to the connected clients instantly instead of the server waiting for the client's request.

Prerequisites

Using Visual Studio 2013. There are some prerequisites to develop the application:

  • Visual Studio 2010 SP1 or Visual Studio 2012.
  • ASP.NET and Web Tools 2012.2

Let's create an application for SignalR development using the following sections:

  • MVC 5 Application
  • Code Execution

MVC 5 Application

Step 1: Open Visual Studio 2013 and create a New Project.

Step 2: Select MVC project template.

Step 3: Open the Package Manager Console.

And write the following command:

install-package Microsoft.AspNet.SignalR

Step 4: You can see in your Solution Explorer that the SignalR was successfully added to your application.

Step 5: Add a new folder named Hubs in your application and add a class in it.

Give the name of your class ChatHub as shown below:

Step 6: Add the following code in the class:

using Microsoft.AspNet.SignalR;
namespace SignalRDemo.Hubs
{
    public class ChatHub : Hub
    {
        public void  LetsChat(string Cl_Name, string Cl_Message)
        {
            Clients.All.NewMessage(Cl_Name, Cl_Message);
        }
    }
}
Step 7: Open the Global.asax file and modify the Applicatio_Start() method as shown below:
public class MvcApplication : System.Web.HttpApplication
{
    protected void Application_Start()
    {
        RouteTable.Routes.MapHubs();
        AreaRegistration.RegisterAllAreas();
        FilterConfig.RegisterGlobalFilters(GlobalFilters.Filters);
        RouteConfig.RegisterRoutes(RouteTable.Routes);
        BundleConfig.RegisterBundles(BundleTable.Bundles);
    }
}

Step 8:
Open your HomeController.cs file and modify it as shown below:
public ActionResult Contact()
{
    ViewBag.Message = "Your contact page."
    return View();
}
public ActionResult Chat()
{
    ViewBag.Message = "Your chat page";
    return View();
}

Step 9: Generate the view for the Chat method as shown in the following parts:

Select Home folder and right-click to add Scaffold

(m8)

Select MVC 5 View in the Add Scaffold wizard

Do as directed in the following image:

Step 10: Add the following code in the Chat.cshtml file:
@{
    ViewBag.Title = "Chat";
}
<hgroup>
    <h2>@ViewBag.Title.</h2>
    <h3>@ViewBag.Message</h3>
</hgroup>
<div class="container">
    <input type="text" id="TxtMessage" />
    <input type="button" id="BtnSend" value="Send" />
    <input type="hidden" id="UserName" />
    <ul id="Chats"></ul>
</div>
@section scripts {
    <script src="~/Scripts/jquery.signalR-1.1.3.js"></script>
    <script src="~/signalr/Hubs"></script>
    <script
        $(function () {
            var chat = $.connection.chatHub;
            chat.client.NewMessage=function(Cl_Name, Cl_Message) {
                $('#Chats').append('<li><strong>' + htmlEncode(Cl_Name)
                    + '</strong>: ' + htmlEncode(Cl_Message) + '</li>');
            };
            $('#UserName').val(prompt('Please Enter Your Name:', ''));
            $('#TxtMessage').focus();
            $.connection.hub.start().done(function () {
                $('#BtnSend').click(function () {
                    chat.server.LetsChat($('#UserName').val(), $('#TxtMessage').val())
                    $('#TxtMessage').val('').focus()
                });
            });
        });
        function htmlEncode(value) {
            var encodedValue = $('<div />').text(value).html();
            return encodedValue;
        }
    </script>
}

Code Execution

Save all your application and debug the application. Use the following procedure.

Step 1: Debug your application. Open /Home/Chat in your browser like: http://localhost:12345/Home/Chat
Step 2: Enter your name in the prompt
Step 3: Enter message and send
Step 4: Copy the browser URL and open more browsers, paste the URL in the address bar and do the same thing as above.



European ASP.NET MVC 5 Hosting :: Introducing ASP.Net SignalR in MVC 5

clock December 17, 2013 05:29 by author Patrick

In this article I am using the ASP.NET SignalR library in the latest MVC 5 project template. Now, what is this real-time functionality? It is used to access the server code and push the content to the connected clients instantly instead of the server waiting for the client's request.

Prerequisites

Using Visual Studio 2013. There are some prerequisites to develop the application:

  • Visual Studio 2010 SP1 or Visual Studio 2012.
  • ASP.NET and Web Tools 2012.2

Let's create an application for SignalR development using the following sections:

  • MVC 5 Application
  • Code Execution

MVC 5 Application

Step 1: Open Visual Studio 2013 and create a New Project.

Step 2: Select MVC project template.

Step 3: Open the Package Manager Console.

And write the following command:

install-package Microsoft.AspNet.SignalR

Step 4: You can see in your Solution Explorer that the SignalR was successfully added to your application.

Step 5: Add a new folder named Hubs in your application and add a class in it.

Give the name of your class ChatHub as shown below:

Step 6: Add the following code in the class:

using Microsoft.AspNet.SignalR;
namespace SignalRDemo.Hubs
{
    public class ChatHub : Hub
    {
        public void  LetsChat(string Cl_Name, string Cl_Message)
        {
            Clients.All.NewMessage(Cl_Name, Cl_Message);
        }
    }
}
Step 7: Open the Global.asax file and modify the Applicatio_Start() method as shown below:
public class MvcApplication : System.Web.HttpApplication
{
    protected void Application_Start()
    {
        RouteTable.Routes.MapHubs();
        AreaRegistration.RegisterAllAreas();
        FilterConfig.RegisterGlobalFilters(GlobalFilters.Filters);
        RouteConfig.RegisterRoutes(RouteTable.Routes);
        BundleConfig.RegisterBundles(BundleTable.Bundles);
    }
}

Step 8:
Open your HomeController.cs file and modify it as shown below:
public ActionResult Contact()
{
    ViewBag.Message = "Your contact page."
    return View();
}
public ActionResult Chat()
{
    ViewBag.Message = "Your chat page";
    return View();
}

Step 9: Generate the view for the Chat method as shown in the following parts:

Select Home folder and right-click to add Scaffold

(m8)

Select MVC 5 View in the Add Scaffold wizard

Do as directed in the following image:

Step 10: Add the following code in the Chat.cshtml file:
@{
    ViewBag.Title = "Chat";
}
<hgroup>
    <h2>@ViewBag.Title.</h2>
    <h3>@ViewBag.Message</h3>
</hgroup>
<div class="container">
    <input type="text" id="TxtMessage" />
    <input type="button" id="BtnSend" value="Send" />
    <input type="hidden" id="UserName" />
    <ul id="Chats"></ul>
</div>
@section scripts {
    <script src="~/Scripts/jquery.signalR-1.1.3.js"></script>
    <script src="~/signalr/Hubs"></script>
    <script
        $(function () {
            var chat = $.connection.chatHub;
            chat.client.NewMessage=function(Cl_Name, Cl_Message) {
                $('#Chats').append('<li><strong>' + htmlEncode(Cl_Name)
                    + '</strong>: ' + htmlEncode(Cl_Message) + '</li>');
            };
            $('#UserName').val(prompt('Please Enter Your Name:', ''));
            $('#TxtMessage').focus();
            $.connection.hub.start().done(function () {
                $('#BtnSend').click(function () {
                    chat.server.LetsChat($('#UserName').val(), $('#TxtMessage').val())
                    $('#TxtMessage').val('').focus()
                });
            });
        });
        function htmlEncode(value) {
            var encodedValue = $('<div />').text(value).html();
            return encodedValue;
        }
    </script>
}

Code Execution

Save all your application and debug the application. Use the following procedure.

Step 1: Debug your application. Open /Home/Chat in your browser like: http://localhost:12345/Home/Chat
Step 2: Enter your name in the prompt
Step 3: Enter message and send
Step 4: Copy the browser URL and open more browsers, paste the URL in the address bar and do the same thing as above.



European ASP.NET MVC 5 Hosting :: Getting Started With Areas in MVC 5

clock December 12, 2013 09:51 by author Patrick

MVC (Model, View, Controller) is a design pattern to separate the data logic from the business and presentation logic. We can also design the structure physically, where we can keap the logic in the controllers and views to exemplify the relationships.

It is also possible that we can have large projects that use MVC, then we need to split the application into smaller units called areas that isolate the larger MVC application into smaller functional groupings. A MVC application could contain several MVC structures (areas).  

How to creating a simple application for defining the area in MVC 5. MVC 5 is the latest version of MVC used in Visual Studio 2013?

You need to have the following to complete this article:

  • MVC 5
  • Visual Studio 2013

In that context, we'll follow the sections given below:MVC 5 application:

  • Adding Controller for Area
  • Adding Views for Area
  • Area Registration
  • Application Execution
  • MVC 5 Application

Use the following procedure to create a Web application based on a MVC 5 template.

Step 1: Open Visual Studio 2013.
Step 2: Create an ASP.NET Web Application with MVC 5 project template.

Step 3: In Solution Explorer, right-click on the project and click "Add" to add an area as shown below:

Step 4: Enter the name for the area, such as "News".

Step 5: Similarly add an another area named "Article".

Now from the steps above you have added two areas for your application named News and Article.

Adding Controller for Area

We have successfully added an area, now we'll add controllers for each of our areas using the following procedure.

Step 1: Right-click on the Controller in your Article area to add a controller.

Step 2: Select "MVC 5 Empty Controller".

Step 3: Enter the name as "ArticleController" .

Step 4: Similarly add the controller for "News".

Now your Area folder should be as in the following screenshot:

Adding Views for Area

We have successfully added a controller for our area, now to add a view for the area using the following procedure.

Step 1: Right-click on the "News" folder in the View to add a View for the News Area.

Step 2: Enter the view name as defined in the NewsController.

Step 3: Generate some content in the View of News as in the following screenshot:

Step 4: You can also add a view as shown in the following screenshot:

Step 5: Generate some content for the Article view.

Area Registration

Step 1: Open the "Global.asax" file.

Step 2: Add the following code in your Application_Start() method:

AreaRegistration.RegisterAllAreas();

Application Execution

Step 1: Open the project view Layout file.

Step 2: Modify the <ul> in the layout file as shown in the following code:

<ul class="nav navbar-nav">
<li>@Html.ActionLink("Home", "Index", "Home")</li>
<li>@Html.ActionLink("About", "About", "Home")</li>
<li>@Html.ActionLink("Contact", "Contact", "Home")</li>
<li>@Html.ActionLink("Article", "Index", "Article", new {area= "Article" }, null)</li>
<li>@Html.ActionLink("News", "Index", "News", new { area = "News" }, null)</li>
</ul>

Step 3: Debug the application, and finish!



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