Introduction
This article consists of two parts. The first part of the article explains how to use an ASP.NET script in a Windows Application. The ASP.NET script, when processed, basically generates HTML output, which is normally displayed by a web browser client like Internet Explorer or Netscape Navigator.
The second part of the article discusses use of Microsoft WebBrowser control in an application. This article does not cover this topic in very detail, but provides pointers to relevant information. This part of the article will display the HTML output generated in the first part.
Using ASP.NET Runtime
ASP.NET exposes a well-known interface that can be used to process a ASP.NET web page request. HttpRuntime
, ApplicationHost
and HttpWorkerRequest
are important classes involved in this process.
The HttpRuntime
is located in System.Web
namespace. It is the entry point of the HTTP pipeline that transforms an aspx request to an HTML page. To transform an aspx page to HTML, its static method ProcessRequest
is used. Following is the signature of the ProcessRequest
function.
public static void ProcessRequest(
HttpWorkerRequest wr
);
Before using HttpRuntime
, it should be passed all required information. The class HttpWorkerRequest
class is used for this purpose. SimpleWorkerRequest
is a simple implementation of HttpWorkerRequest
that can be used to pass required parameters. Following shows constructor signature of the class.
public SimpleWorkerRequest(
string page,
string query,
TextWriter output
);
The following code snippet can be used to transform an aspx page to an HTML page and send the HTML page to the console. Remember, this code snippet should be run in a new AppDomain created by the client. As explained in the coming sections, the class ApplicationHost
can be used for this purpose.
SimpleWorkerRequest = new SimpleWorkerRequest(aspxPage,
query,
Console.Out);
HttpRuntime.ProcessRequest(req);
It should be noted that the HttpRuntime
can be used only in a new AppDomain. The caller of the ASP.NET runtime should create a new AppDomain for the ASP.NET runtime environment, and the ProcessRequest
method of the HttpRuntime
should be called in the newly created AppDomain. The new AppDomain can be created by using the AppDomain
and the Assembly
classes if the .NET framework. However, the ApplicationHost
class is bundled with the .NET SDK exactly for this task, and simplifies the programming work involved. This article uses ApplicationHost
class. The only method of this class, CreateApplicationHost
, is used for this purpose. It's signature is given in the following code snippet.
public static object CreateApplicationHost(
Type hostType,
string virtualDir,
string physicalDir
);
Above call loads the assembly containing the class hostType
in the new AppDomain created and returns a reference to it. Remember the hostType
is created in the newly created AppDomain and only the reference (actually proxy) is returned. Its use is shown in the following code snippet.
MyHost host = new ApplicationHost.CreateApplicationHost(
typeof("MyHost"),
"/foo",
Environment.CurrentDirectory);
The following section summarizes the steps required to use the ASP.NET runtime in a Windows application.
- Create a new AppDomain to call the
HttpRuntime.PrecessRequest
method on the web page to be processed. This results in HTML being generated from the ASP.NET web page. The output is sent to the StreamWriter
passed as a third parameter in the function call, HttpRuntime.ProcessRequest
.
- Either process the HTML page directly from the
StreamWriter
or save the output generated to a file. The save file can be used later. This article saves the HTML output to a file, which is used later.
- Use the HTML output generated in your application. This article uses the Microsoft HTML
WebBrowser
control to display the HTML output.
The following code snippet, from the code included with article, shows the steps 1 and 2.
host = (MyHost)ApplicationHost.CreateApplicationHost(
typeof(MyHost),
"/foo",
Environment.CurrentDirectory);
host.CreateHtmlPage(webPage, null, m_outFile);
CreateHtmlPage
function of the MyHost
class is given below. Note that the HTML output generated will be saved to a file specified by the third parameter. This file will be later displayed by the WebBrowser
control.
public void CreateHtmlPage(String webPage,
String query,
String file)
{
StreamWriter stream = new StreamWriter(file);
SimpleWorkerRequest swr = new SimpleWorkerRequest(
webPage,
query,
stream);
HttpRuntime.ProcessRequest(swr);
stream.Close();
}
Using Microsoft WebBrowser Control
Using Microsoft WebBrowser
control is explained in the article Using the WebBrowser Control in .NET by Nikhil Dabas in detail. The process is summarized in the following steps.
- Import the assemblies from the
WebBrowser
control, SHDocVw.dll, using the command given below. It will generate two assemblies AxShDocVw.dll and SHDocVw.dll. aximp c:\windows\system\shdocvw.dll
- Use the imported
WebBrowser
control in the .NET application. The control to be used is AxSHDocVw.AxWebBrowser
.
To use the WebBrowser
control in this article, following code is used.
private AxSHDocVw.AxWebBrowser m_Browser;
this.m_Browser = new AxSHDocVw.AxWebBrowser();
this.label = new System.Windows.Forms.Label();
this.txtFile = new System.Windows.Forms.TextBox();
this.cmdOpen = new System.Windows.Forms.Button();
((System.ComponentModel.ISupportInitialize)
(this.m_Browser)).BeginInit();
this.SuspendLayout();
this.m_Browser.Anchor =
((System.Windows.Forms.AnchorStyles)
((((System.Windows.Forms.AnchorStyles.Top
| System.Windows.Forms.AnchorStyles.Bottom)
| System.Windows.Forms.AnchorStyles.Left)
| System.Windows.Forms.AnchorStyles.Right)));
this.m_Browser.Enabled = true;
this.m_Browser.Location = new System.Drawing.Point(0, 72);
this.m_Browser.Size = new System.Drawing.Size(360, 232);
this.m_Browser.TabIndex = 0;
The ASP.NET runtime requires the binaries to be located either in GAC or in the bin sub directory of the web application. The build script included with the code automatically copies the required assemblies in the bin directory. If you get an exception like "System.IO.FileNotFoundException
", check this point.
Running the Application
Use either the command line "UsingAspRuntime.exe AspxFileName" or specify the aspx file in the Filename Text Box and click open button. Two ASP.NET files, test.aspx and test2.aspx, are included with the code.
History
First Update
- Updated the source code to support PostBack.
- Update the source code to create only one AppDomain to process all the requests.
- Updated the source code to handle files other than ASP.NET.