Use the XRM tooling common login control in your client applications
Applies To: Dynamics CRM 2015
The Microsoft Dynamics CRM SDK provides you with a template for Microsoft Visual Studio that enables you to use the common login control in your client applications. The code for CRM authentication, credential storage and retrieval, and diagnostic logging is built into the template so that you can quickly leverage these capabilities in your Windows client applications for CRM. The common login control is an implementation of the Microsoft.Xrm.Tooling.CrmConnectControl, and the control resembles the following image.
In This Topic
Prerequisites
Create a WPF application using the common login control template
Add the common login control template to your existing WPF application
Prerequisites
.NET Framework 4.5.2
Microsoft Visual Studio 2012 or Visual Studio 2013
Nuget Package Manager for Visual Studio 2012 or Visual Studio 2013
Microsoft Dynamics CRM SDK templates for Visual Studio that contains the common login control template. You can get it in one of the following ways:
Download the CRM SDK template from Visual Studio gallery, and double-click the CRMSDKTemplates.vsix file to install the template in Visual Studio.
Download and extract the CRM SDK package. The templates file, CRMSDKTemplates.vsix, is located in the SDK\Templates folder. Double-click the CRMSDKTemplates.vsix file to install the template in Visual Studio.
Create a WPF application using the common login control template
Here is a quick way to create a Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) application that leverages the common login control and the underlying code for authentication, credential storage and reuse, and default tracing or logging.
Start Microsoft Visual Studio, and create a new project.
In the New Project dialog box:
From the list of installed templates, expand Visual C#, and select CRM SDK Templates.
Ensure that .NET Framework 4.5.2 is selected.
Select WPF Application for CRM.
Specify the name and location of the project, and click OK.
To test the project:
Save the project and press F5 or click Debug > Start Debugging to verify if the project compiles successfully. On successful compilation, you’ll see a MainWindow with Login to CRM button. Click the button to display the common login control.
Test the authentication by providing your credentials to connect to CRM, and then click Login. A message displays your CRM connection status.
For a sample that uses the common login control template to connect to CRM and perform various operations, see Sample: Quick start for XRM Tooling API.
Note
The WPF Application for CRM template uses the Microsoft.Xrm.Tooling.Ui.Styles.dll file instead of the Microsoft.Xrm.Tooling.Ui.Resources.dll file to provide XAML resources to the common login control. The Microsoft.Xrm.Tooling.Ui.Resources.dll file is deprecated in the current release, and the Microsoft.Xrm.Tooling.Ui.Styles.dll file provides the same capabilities as Microsoft.Xrm.Tooling.Ui.Resources.dll.
Add the common login control template to your existing WPF application
If you already have a WPF client application, you can easily add the common login control template to it to leverage the uniform sign-in experience and the underlying code for CRM authentication, credential storage and reuse, and default tracing or logging. In this case, you must create a control in the user interface of your existing client application to call the common login control, instantiate an instance of the CRM connection object, and then use the connection object to perform various operations in CRM.
Open an existing WPF application project in Visual Studio. For this example, let’s assume that the name of your WPF application project is SampleWPFApp.
Add the common login control template to your project.
In the Solution Explorer pane, right-click the project name, and click Add > New Item.
In the Add New Item dialog box, from the list of installed templates, expand Visual C#, and select CRM SDK Templates. Click CRM Login Form for WPF Applications, and click OK.
The newly added CrmLoginForm1.xaml login control is displayed in the XAML designer area. If it doesn’t, double-click the CrmLoginForm1.xaml file in the Solution Explorer pane.
You must now call the newly added login control from your application. To do this, add a Button control on your MainWindow.xaml file, and set the name and content to btnSignIn and Sign in to CRM respectively.
Double-click the button to add code for the click event of the btnSignIn button in the MainWindow.xaml.cs file.
Add the following sample code in the click event of the btnSignIn button to call the CrmLoginForm1 control, and create an instance of the CRM connection object.
// Establish the Login control. CRMLoginForm1 ctrl = new CRMLoginForm1(); // Wire event to login response. ctrl.ConnectionToCrmCompleted += ctrl_ConnectionToCrmCompleted; // Show the login control. ctrl.ShowDialog(); // Handle the returned CRM connection object. // On successful connection, display the CRM version and connected org name if (ctrl.CrmConnectionMgr != null && ctrl.CrmConnectionMgr.CrmSvc != null && ctrl.CrmConnectionMgr.CrmSvc.IsReady) { MessageBox.Show("Connected to CRM! Version: " + ctrl.CrmConnectionMgr.CrmSvc.ConnectedOrgVersion.ToString() + " Org: " + ctrl.CrmConnectionMgr.CrmSvc.ConnectedOrgUniqueName, "Connection Status"); // Perform your actions here } else { MessageBox.Show("Cannot connect; try again!", "Connection Status"); }
Add the definition of the ctrl_ConnectionToCrmCompleted event below the click event of the button:
private void ctrl_ConnectionToCrmCompleted(object sender, EventArgs e) { if (sender is CRMLoginForm1) { this.Dispatcher.Invoke(() => { ((CRMLoginForm1)sender).Close(); }); } }
This is how your MainWindow.xaml.cs file appears after adding code from the previous two steps:
To test the project:
Save the project and press F5 or click Debug > Start Debugging to verify if the project compiles successfully. On successful compilation, you will see a MainWindow with the new Sign In to CRM button. Click it to display the common login control.
Test the authentication by providing your credentials to connect to CRM, and then click Login. If successful, a message appears stating the version and the organization name that you are connected to. Click OK to close the message.
If you click Sign In to CRM again, the application prompts you to either choose the saved credentials from the last sign-in activity, or to re-enter the new credentials.
See Also
Sample: Quick start for XRM Tooling API
Build Windows client applications using the XRM tools
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