Introduction
For my last project, I developed a nice library in VB.Net for Credit Card Processing. It used sockets and the message format between our servers and those of Citibank was based on a variant of ISO 8583. Calling this library from ASP.Net pages was working fine. But, my Project Manager wanted it to be called from some old VB 6 and classical ASP applications too. So, this scenario demanded that there should be some sort of COM interface to access that component. Also, our Tech. Lead wanted to use Late Binding (i.e. "CREATEOBJECT (PROG ID)") to instantiate this component / class library.
So, I was asked to build COM interface for this class library. I did some research and found some very useful articles that dealt with the same problem. However, I found them somewhat difficult to follow. However, I managed to complete my development using those articles. Now, I want to to share my own experience in a somewhat easier manner (at least I believe so) to make life easier for other developers. The only prerequisite for this article is that you should have Microsoft Visual Studio .Net and should have some basic knowledge of COM.
Problem
Obviously, I cannot present the actual class here. In stead, I will use a very simple class for demo purposes. This class is written in VB.Net as a Class Library. Now, the requirement is that it is to be accessed from clients (VB 6 , classic ASP or even ASP.Net application using Late Binding) with
CreateObject (PROG ID of the component).
If you follow this example, you can apply the same procedure for very complex classes too.
Public class demo
Private csError As String
Public ReadOnly Property ErrorMsg() As String
Get
Return csError
End Get
End Property
Public Function Concat(ByVal str1 As String, ByVal str2 As String) As STRING
return Concat = str1 + " " + str2
End function
End class
This class demo
which has a property ErrorMsg
and one function Concat
, built as a class library project using Visual Studio.Net, has been given a Strong Name
using the strong name tool sn.exe
. It is important to note that you can avoid strong naming your assembly. however, I would advise you against it. If you do not want to use the strong name, then keep your component and the calling client in the same directory.
Solution
As I found out, there are two ways to solve this problem. One is very easy while the other one is a bit hard. Unfortunately, I came to know the hard one first and discovered the second one after I had implemented my component using the hard method.
Solution 1 : To create a COM object using the COM class template of Visual Studio . Net
The easiest way to create COM objects is by using the COM class template of Visual Studio .Net. The COM class template creates a new class, then configures your project to generate the class as a COM object and registers it with the operating system automatically. All the background work will be done by Visual Studio (how nice !!).
Here are the steps involved using Visual Studio .Net:
- Open a New Windows Application project by clicking
New
on the File
menu, and then clicking Project
. The New Project dialog box will appear.
- With Visual Basic Projects highlighted in the Project Types list, select
Class Library
from the Templates list, and then click OK. The new project will be displayed.
- Select
Add New Item
from the Project menu. The Add New Item dialog box will be displayed.
- Select
COM Class
from the Templates list, and then click Open. Visual Basic .NET will add a new class and configure the new project for COM interop.
- Add code, such as properties, methods, and events to the COM class. In our case we will just copy the code for property
ErrorMsg
and method Concat
into the class and rename the class to class demo
.
- Select
Build Solution
from the Build menu. Visual Basic .NET will build the assembly and register the new COM object with the operating system automatically.
What 's next ? nothing folks. Your COM component is ready to be accessed from any VB or classic ASP page etc. using Createobject(...)
.
Solution 2 : Do it yourself approach
This is a little bit difficult as compared to method number 1. But, if you are a programmer who likes to go little bit deeper into details, you will be inclined to go this way. Some basic knowledge about COM is required.
Once you complete all the steps for this method, your class will look quite similar to this one.
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
<Guid("1F249C84-A090-4a5b-B592-FD64C07DAB75"), _
InterfaceType(ComInterfaceType.InterfaceIsIDispatch)> _
Public Interface _demo
<DispId(1)> Function Concat(Byval s1 as string, ByVal S2 As String) as string
<DispId(2)> readonly Property ErrorMsg() as string
End Interface
<Guid("E42FBD03-96DF-43a7-A491-23E735B32C5C"), _
ClassInterface(ClassInterfaceType.None), _
ProgId("comDemo.demo")> Public Class demo
Implements _demo
Private csError As String
Public ReadOnly Property ErrorMsg() As String
implements _demo.errormsg
Get
Return csError
End Get
End Property
Public Function Concat(ByVal str1 As String, ByVal str2 As String) As STRING
implements _demo.Concat
return Concat = str1 + " " + str2
end function
end class
STEPS INVOLVED:
1. Add the interop namespace to your class
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
2. Then develop an interface with the same name as of your original class, just add _ before it to make it different. For our example, it will be like
Public Interface _demo
End Interface
3. Then, create a
GUID
for this interface. To create
GUID
for your COM object, click
Create GUID
on the
Tools
menu, or launch
guidgen.exe
to start the
guidgen
utility. Search for the file
guidgen.exe
on your machine. It is located under
c:\program files\ Microsoft visual studio .net\common7\ tools
directory on my computer. Run it. Then, select
Registry Format
from the list of formats provided by the guidgen application. Click the
New GUID
button to generate the GUID and click the
Copy
button to copy the GUID to the clipboard. Paste this GUID into the Visual Studio .Net code editor. Remove the leading and trailing braces from the GUID provided. For example, if the GUID provided by guidgen is
{2C8B0AEE-02C9-486e-B809-C780A11530FE}
then the GUID should appear as:
2C8B0AEE-02C9-486e-B809-C780A11530FE
.
Once a guid is created, paste it into the class as
Guid("1F249C84-A090-4a5b-B592-FD64C07DAB75")
Then use the
interfacetype
attribute to make it a
Dispatch
interface required by automation as
InterfaceType(ComInterfaceType.InterfaceIsIDispatch)
Unless you specify otherwise, the export process converts all managed interfaces to Dual interfaces in a type library. Dual interfaces enable COM clients to choose between Early and Late Binding.You can apply the
InterfaceTypeAttribute
attribute to an interface to selectively indicate that the interface should be exported as a
Dual
interface, an
IUnknown-derived
interface, or a
dispatch-only
interface (dispinterface). All exported interfaces extend directly from either
IUnknown
or
IDispatch
, regardless of their inheritance hierarchy in managed code.
4. In the interface, expose the methods, properties etc that you want the clients to see and access. In our case, we will expose both our property and our method and will assign arbitrarily values of 1 and 2 as dispids
. Our interface will look like this at this point of time
<Guid("1F249C84-A090-4a5b-B592-FD64C07DAB75"), _
InterfaceType(ComInterfaceType.InterfaceIsIDispatch)> _
Public Interface _demo
<DispId(1)> Function Concat(Byval s1 as string, ByVal S2 As String) as string
<DispId(2)> readonly Property ErrorMsg() as string
End Interface
5. In a similar fashion, you need to create a
GUID
for the actual class too.
Guid("E42FBD03-96DF-43a7-A491-23E735B32C5C")
Next, use the interop attributes as follows
ClassInterface(ClassInterfaceType.None), _
ProgId("comDemo.demo")> Public Class demo
Implements _demo
You must have noticed that you have to specify the
ProgID
for the class here. This is the same
ProgID
that we will be using to call our component as follows;
set myobject = createobject ("comDemo.demo") ' vb6 or vbscript
implements _demo
suggests that the class is implementing the interface. Note that we are using classinterfacetype.none
for the classinterface
attribute. Microsoft states that
"To reduce the risk of breaking COM clients by inadvertently reordering the interface layout, isolate all changes to the class from the interface layout by explicitly defining interfaces.Use the ClassInterfaceAttribute to disengage the automatic generation of the class interface and implement an explicit interface for the class, as the following code fragment shows:
<ClassInterface(ClassInterfaceType.None)>Public Class LoanApp
Implements IExplicit
Sub M() Implements IExplicit.M
�
End Class
The ClassInterfaceType.None value prevents the class interface from being generated when the class metadata is exported to a type library. In the preceding example, COM clients can access the LoanApp class only through the IExplicit interface."
6. The next step is to modify the properties and methods signatures which we want to expose. So
Public ReadOnly Property ErrorMsg() As String
becomes
Public ReadOnly Property ErrorMsg() As String implements _demo.errormsg
and
Public Function Concat(ByVal str1 As String, ByVal str2 As String) As String
becomes
Public Function Concat (ByVal str1 As String, ByVal str2 As String)
As String implements _demo.Concat
7. Once you make these changes to your class , you are all set. Just one more change is required to make it complete. Right click the project to bring the project properties, there under the
Build
properties check the
interop
check box. When building the project, this will ensure that a type library is created for the COM Interface and is registered too. If you do not want to use this option, you can use
Regasm
utility to do the same. For Regasm, the syntax would be
regasm demo.dll /tlb: demo.tlb
It will create the type library and will register it to for you.
That was it
You can build the project and can access it
- Through Late binding :
using createobject("comDemo.demo")
or
- Through Early binding: by setting reference to this component in you project
Strong Name Requirement
It is recommended that your assembly should have a strong name. For that, you can use the strong name tool sn.exe
. If you would not create the strong name, then you will have to keep the component and the calling program in the same directory.
References
- MSDN library.
- Some very good articles on www.codeproject.com