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VirtualDirectory Class

Definition

Represents a directory object in a virtual file or resource space.

public abstract class VirtualDirectory : System.Web.Hosting.VirtualFileBase
Inheritance

Examples

The following code example is a VirtualDirectory class implementation that returns virtual directory information stored in a DataSet object. This code works with the code examples for the VirtualPathProvider and VirtualFile classes to provide virtual resources from a data store that is loaded into a DataSet object. For the complete instructions for compiling and running the example, see the Example section of the VirtualPathProvider class overview.

This example has two parts, the VirtualDirectory class implementation and the XML data file used to populate the DataSet object.

The first code example is an implementation of the VirtualDirectory class. In the constructor it uses a method on a custom VirtualPathProvider object to return a DataSet object. It then searches the DataSet object to retrieve the directory information associated with the virtual path provided.

using System;
using System.Collections;
using System.Data;
using System.Security.Permissions;
using System.Web;
using System.Web.Hosting;

namespace Samples.AspNet.CS
{
  [AspNetHostingPermission(SecurityAction.Demand, Level = AspNetHostingPermissionLevel.Minimal)]
  [AspNetHostingPermission(SecurityAction.InheritanceDemand, Level = AspNetHostingPermissionLevel.Minimal)]
  public class SampleVirtualDirectory : VirtualDirectory
  {
    SamplePathProvider spp;

    private bool exists;
    public bool Exists
    {
      get { return exists; }
    }

    public SampleVirtualDirectory(string virtualDir, SamplePathProvider provider)
      : base(virtualDir)
    {
      spp = provider;
      GetData();
    }

    protected void GetData()
    {
      DataSet ds = spp.GetVirtualData();

      // Clean up the path to match data in resource file.
      string path = VirtualPath.Replace(HostingEnvironment.ApplicationVirtualPath, "");
      path = path.TrimEnd('/');

      // Get the virtual directory from the resource table.
      DataTable dirs = ds.Tables["resource"];
      DataRow[] rows = dirs.Select(
        String.Format("(name = '{0}') AND (type='dir')", path));

      // If the select returned a row, the directory exists.
      if (rows.Length > 0)
      {
        exists = true;

        // Get children from the resource table.
        // This technique works for small numbers of virtual resources.
        //   Sites with moderate to large numbers of virtual
        //   resources should choose a method that consumes fewer
        //   computer resources.
        DataRow[] childRows = dirs.Select(
          String.Format("parentPath = '{0}'", path));

        foreach (DataRow childRow in childRows)
        {
          string childPath = (string)childRow["path"];

          if (childRow["type"].ToString() == "dir")
          {
            SampleVirtualDirectory svd = new SampleVirtualDirectory(childPath, spp);
            children.Add(svd);
            directories.Add(svd);
          }
          else
          {
            SampleVirtualFile svf = new SampleVirtualFile(childPath, spp);
            children.Add(svf);
            files.Add(svf);
          }
        }
      }
    }

    private ArrayList children = new ArrayList();
    public override IEnumerable Children
    {
      get { return children; }
    }

    private ArrayList directories = new ArrayList();
    public override IEnumerable Directories
    {
      get { return directories; }
    }

    private ArrayList files = new ArrayList();
    public override IEnumerable Files
    {
      get { return files; }
    }
  }
}

The second example is the XML data file used to populate the DataSet object returned by the custom VirtualPathProvider object. This XML data is used to demonstrate using the VirtualPathProvider, VirtualFile, and VirtualDirectory classes to retrieve data from external data, and is not intended to represent a production-quality data store.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>  
  <resource type="dir"   
    path="/vrDir"   
    parentPath=""   
    content="">  
    <resource type="file"   
      path="/vrDir/Level1FileA.vrf"  
      parentPath="/vrDir"   
      content="This is the content of file Level1FileA." >  
    </resource>  
    <resource type="file"   
      path="/vrDir/Level1FileB.vrf"  
      parentPath="/vrDir"   
      content="This is the content of file Level1FileB.">  
    </resource>  
    <resource type="dir"   
      path="/vrDir/Level2DirA"   
      parentPath="/vrDir"   
      content="">  
        <resource type="file"   
          path="/vrDir/Level2DirA/Level2FileA.vrf"   
          parentPath="/vrDir/Level2DirA"   
          content="This is the content of file Level2FileA." >  
        </resource>  
        <resource type="file"   
          path="/vrDir/Level2DirA/Level2FileB.vrf"  
          parentPath="/vrDir/Level2DirA"   
          content="This is the content of file Level2FileB.">  
        </resource>  
    </resource>  
    <resource type="dir"   
      path="/vrDir/Level2DirB"   
      parentPath="/vrDir"   
      content="">  
      <resource type="file"   
        path="/vrDir/Level2DirB/Level2FileA.vrf"   
        parentPath="/vrDir/Level2DirB"   
        content="This is the content of file Level2FileA." >  
      </resource>  
      <resource type="file"   
        path="/vrDir/Level2DirB/Level2FileB.vrf"  
        parentPath="/vrDir/Level2DirB"   
        content="This is the content of file Level2FileB.">  
       </resource>  
    </resource>  
  </resource>  

Remarks

The VirtualDirectory class is the base class for objects that represent directories in a virtual file system. Typically, you would implement a descendent of the VirtualDirectory class for each VirtualPathProvider class descendent in your Web application.

Notes to Implementers

When you inherit from the VirtualDirectory class, you must override the Children, Directories, and Files properties to return an object implementing the IEnumerable interface.

If your virtual-directory structure contains moderate to large numbers of virtual resources, you should take care to minimize the system resources consumed when enumerating the virtual directory by calling the Children, Directories, or Files properties.

Constructors

VirtualDirectory(String)

Initializes a new instance of the VirtualDirectory class.

Properties

Children

Gets a list of the files and subdirectories contained in this virtual directory.

Directories

Gets a list of all the subdirectories contained in this directory.

Files

Gets a list of all files contained in this directory.

IsDirectory

Gets a value that indicates that this is a virtual resource that should be treated as a directory.

Name

Gets the display name of the virtual resource.

(Inherited from VirtualFileBase)
VirtualPath

Gets the virtual file path.

(Inherited from VirtualFileBase)

Methods

CreateObjRef(Type)

Creates an object that contains all the relevant information required to generate a proxy used to communicate with a remote object.

(Inherited from MarshalByRefObject)
Equals(Object)

Determines whether the specified object is equal to the current object.

(Inherited from Object)
GetHashCode()

Serves as the default hash function.

(Inherited from Object)
GetLifetimeService()
Obsolete.

Retrieves the current lifetime service object that controls the lifetime policy for this instance.

(Inherited from MarshalByRefObject)
GetType()

Gets the Type of the current instance.

(Inherited from Object)
InitializeLifetimeService()

Gives a VirtualFileBase instance an infinite lifetime by preventing a lease from being created.

(Inherited from VirtualFileBase)
MemberwiseClone()

Creates a shallow copy of the current Object.

(Inherited from Object)
MemberwiseClone(Boolean)

Creates a shallow copy of the current MarshalByRefObject object.

(Inherited from MarshalByRefObject)
ToString()

Returns a string that represents the current object.

(Inherited from Object)

Applies to

Product Versies
.NET Framework 2.0, 3.0, 3.5, 4.0, 4.5, 4.5.1, 4.5.2, 4.6, 4.6.1, 4.6.2, 4.7, 4.7.1, 4.7.2, 4.8, 4.8.1

See also