WPF application to communicate with Microsoft Project Server 2010 - c#

One of our future requirement at work is to be able to read and write from our WPF application into Microsoft Project Server 2010. We know the fact that Microsoft Project Server 2010 is built on top of Sharepoint(from http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/office/ms504195%28v=office.15%29) so we know that you could be able to do this using Sharepoint programming(please correct me if I am wrong).
Based from searching in StackOverFlow and online we could not able to find any resources on how to communicate with Project Server using our WPF application. Is this really the case for WPF app and Project Server? Or we could be missing something. We recently implemented Exchange Server communication with our WPF app and we thought it will be similar case in terms of Project Server 2010.
(More info: We are using TFS for team collaboration)

True: Project Server is built on top of Sharepoint
Partially Wrong: Data related to Project Server (except some configuration information) can be accessed using SharePoint API calls.
Project Server uses its' own API called PSI: Project Server Interface, (link).
The API includes web services (WCF or ASP.NET) to access different data related to project plans, resources, etc. Some information can be accessed through different services, but set of fields in the case could be different: Field A + Field B could be accessed through Web service A, but only Field B could be accessed through Web service B
PSI works according to Security setups on the Project Server and there are required permissions defined for every function of the API.
I said that it is partially wrong that Project Server data can be accessed using SharePoint API. The partial is because you can synchronize your projects with SharePoint lists and in this case the SharePoint lists can be accessed using SharePoint API.

Related

What's the difference between ASP.NET Core Hosted and Server-Side Blazor, really?

I'm still struggling to understand the difference between ASP.NET Core Hosted and Server-side Blazor. I know same question already exists, but it's not satisfying. In fact, I couldn't find the satisfying answer anywhere - the answers were more or less the same.
If hosted option uses server (IIS, Kestrel), then why server-side? Confusing... It's a shame that official documentation didn't shed the light either...
UPDATE
The confusion stems from the fact that we have THREE options to create Blazor application. After executing dotnew new --list I get:
dotnet new blazorserver (Blazor Server App)
dotnet blazorwasm (Blazor WebAssembly App)
However, there's a third option:
dotnet blazorwasm --hosted (or dotnet blazor --hosted)
It's the same as check box in Visual Studio when creating application:
The documentation says:
you have the option of configuring the app to use an ASP.NET Core
backend by selecting the ASP.NET Core hosted check box
But no explanation was provided what does it mean...
Re this part of your question:
However, there's a third option:
dotnet blazorwasm --hosted (or dotnet blazor --hosted)
It's the same as check box in Visual Studio when creating application:
The
documentation
says:
you have the option of configuring the app to use an ASP.NET Core
backend by selecting the ASP.NET Core hosted check box
But no explanation was provided what does it mean...
TL;DR
'Hosted' is used where you want the back-end of your site and the Blazor client using that back-end to both be hosted on the same website.
In Detail
I agree, the documentation really isn't terribly clear about all of this, but the explanation is actually simpler than it seems:
The Blazor app has to be 'hosted' somewhere
The first thing to remember is that the Blazor WebAssembly 'app' is not a standalone website, it's an app that's embedded in a website. In a lot of cases it will behave like a website, because it will be used as a Single Page Application, but that is by no means required.
Essentially the Blazor WebAssembly app is a series of files and a JavaScript file that are created by compiling/publishing your Blazor project.
Those files then need to be put on a website somewhere and the combination of the name of a div tag and the Blazor JS file produced for your site deals with wiring your app files into the WebAssembly part of the browser so that it's then rendered on the page.
The key here is that the website 'hosting' your Blazor app does not have to be an ASP.NET Core site. It could be any site, pure HTML, Drupal, whatever, it just needs to be shown on a browser that handles WebAssembly and JavaScript correctly.
However, if you're also writing the backend of your site in ASP.NET Core, you can reuse that site
So, your Blazor project doesn't have to be hosted in a website written in ASP.NET Core, but it does have to be hosted somewhere (so the user can see it).
If you're also writing the back-end of the site at the same time, e.g. if you're writing an API or SignalR hub to send and receive data from your Blazor client, and if you're writing that back-end in ASP.NET Core, then you can reuse that same site to also host your Blazor client.
This scenario is what the 'Hosted' option is for.
If you create a project using the template in the screenshot above, with the 'hosted' option ticked, you'll see that the [YourProjectName].Server project that's created is the Start Up project, but the index.html page that's shown when you run that project has come from the [YourProjectName].Client project.
This approach means you only have one site running on your server (which could be good or bad) and also means you won't run across any CORS issues.
But you don't have to have an ASP.NET Core site at all
If your Blazor site is a standalone site that doesn't read/write from any server, or if it only talks to 3rd party APIs or an existing Web API running on the older .NET Framework, then you don't actually need an ASP.NET Core site at all.
In that case you don't use the 'hosted' option.
Instead, you can simply publish your Blazor project and then take the files from the release folder and host them in any site.
Update
I see where you are coming from now. The confusion stems from the fact that you have an option called --hosted when using the client-hosted Blazor. This options means having Blazor to include ASP.NET Core runtime.
Why this option? Because you can write an offline app (e.g. calculator app) that does not need any kind of connection to external services, making ASP.NET Core irrelevant. However, you might want to write an online app that accesses online DB, external APIs, do verification, etc. For these kind of apps, you will need an ASP.NET Core stack to support your app.
Check this FAQ: https://github.com/aspnet/Blazor/wiki/FAQ#q-can-i-use-blazor-with-aspnet-core-on-the-server
Original answer
They are two hosting models: server-hosted, and client-hosted.
The difference is whether the app is hosted in server, or in client. Server hosting means your app logic runs in the server (you can think of it similar to what Web Forms is), you click on a button, an "Ajax" call sends the request, the server receives the request, and sends back the updated page. However, here it uses SignalR not Ajax, which is a low level socket communication (read efficient). And instead of updating a whole page, it updates only the relevant parts (thus it is a single page application).
On the other hand, client hosting means your logic runs within the browser. Think of it as if your C# logic is converted into JS, and it is embedded in the page. So the logic runs in the browser. This is possible after the introduction of WebAssembly which you might want to read about.
Let's say you want to create a calculator app. Your server hosted app will then need to communicate with the server to calculate and get the result for each calculation, while the client hosted does not need, and calculates the result in browser.
You might wonder, why we have two options. The reason being that support for WebAssembly (which a client hosted app relies on) is either incomplete or non-existant in many browsers, and performance differs widely too.
https://caniuse.com/#feat=wasm
The question is about the option "ASP.NET Core hosted" in Visual Studio, while creating a new Blazor Project with Blazor WebAssembly App.
Selecting this option scaffolds out 3 Projects for you (vs 1 WebAssembly project, if this option is not selected)
Server Side Blazor Project
Client Side Blazor Project (WebAssembly)
Shared project for shared entities between Server and Client Projects.
With this option you can have
Blazor WebAssembly only option for sections of your project where the logic can execute in browser.
Server hosted option where all the processing is done on server and only HTML is rendered onto the browser.
When deployed, all these projects go to the same location. So if you have a requirement for both Server Side as well as Client side options, then go for it.
I too had the same confusion while reading the documentation. But it was explained in Blazor webassembly section
dotnet blazorwasm - is a standalone project
dotnet blazorwasm --hosted (or dotnet blazor --hosted) - is a projected hosted with ASP.NET Core backing API's.
A hosted deployment serves the Blazor WebAssembly app to browsers from an ASP.NET Core app that runs on a web server.
The client Blazor WebAssembly app is published into the /bin/Release/{TARGET FRAMEWORK}/publish/wwwroot folder of the server app, along with any other static web assets of the server app. The two apps are deployed together. A web server that is capable of hosting an ASP.NET Core app is required. For a hosted deployment, Visual Studio includes the Blazor WebAssembly App project template (blazorwasm template when using the dotnet new command) with the Hosted option selected (-ho|--hosted when using the dotnet new command).
Here are my two cents.
Create a Blazor WebAssembly App with ASP.NET Core Hosted check box selected.
Once created observe the project references.
Note that the server project references client project.
I had this same confusion as others, that the client calls the server, and that they are two independent Visual Studio projects. So this project references puzzled me.
The fact is client project is hosted by and served by the server project. When we want to run the app, we need to run the server project and not the client project.
So when you want to run the Solution(App), you must ensure to set the Server project as the startup project and not both the server and client. Due to my initial misunderstanding, I was setting multiple startup project, thinking that the client(something like React App) calls the server(WebApi), and that they both should be running simultaneously, for the client to call the server.
The above is correct, but the following is INCORRECT.
If you do that, you get the following error, and this stung me.
Microsoft Visual Studio - One or more errors occurred. Failed to launch debug adapter error
And finally if you are thinking to dockarize by adding docker files and docker-compose files for different kinds of Blazor apps, do take a look at this github repo.
Specifically for this kind of apps that we are talking about take a look at this and this folder in that repo.
Blazor-WASM
The application can work offline after the first loading. As an Example If you make Loan calculator with Blazor WASM, you can send all the data, business logic and validation to the client side in the first load like loan types, loan rates, max repayment period like that then because of the logic also in client side, it don't need do the communication with the server again and again when you change the loan type or repayment period because business logic in client side using the user selected data Blazor can render the UI and show the result.
Blazor-server
Application use server to render the UI so as on the Loan application if user change the loan type blazor send that user change value to server using SignalR and in the server has data and the logic for get the result, after that server render UI and send UI changes to the client side using SignalR and redraw the UI in clients screen.
Blazor-ASP.NET Core Hosted
Visual studio generate 3 projects in the core hosted template
ClientProject - this is a Blazor-WASM application
ServerProject - this is a .NET CORE API
SharedClassProject - this is a class library that holds shared
objects between client and server
As the loan example in the first load loan types and calculation logic are loaded in client side.
If the user selects the loan type Blazor creates an http call to the API application to get the loan rates according to the selected loan type if the interest rate is in the db.
Then the user enters the repayment period because of calculation logic in the client side. Now the application can calculate the result and render the UI to show the result. So with this model you can keep some data or logic in the server and other data or logic on the client side.

Internet access for SSRS reports

I am trying to get my company to start using SSRS for reporting but I realized something today that I have never tried to use SSRS outside the local LAN before. Our application is external facing on the internet and if I implemented SSRS, I would need to be able to access the Report Manager via an external URL.
It is setup and configured currently, but I can only use it locally on the company domain. I tried searching the web for how to configure this and what best practice is but I didn't really get anywhere.
I imagine it would not be good to set it up on the same server that the database is hosted on? Has anyone done this before? I have setup one application that was inherently not meant to be external before to be external and it was a pain in the ass. :D Course, that application had to be proxied through Tomcat to IIS.
We have a developed an intranet web application build on ASP.Net MVC 4 and SSRS 2012, which is live for past 2 years.
Now we planning to host the same in internet. We are having a bottle neck now for SSRS. As SSRS web access is not ready to use externally (internet).
I also checked for SSRS custom authentication which again not much recommended by Microsoft!
We are looking for something like a proxy (web application) to the SSRS web access, which can be hosted as a web application in IIS along with other services.
Is there any ready to use references / tools available.
Update : For better understanding
We are rendering the ssrs reports inside the Asp.Net mvc razor views using iframe.
And also we are using ssrs for export to various formats.
Use the ReportViewer control to hide the SSRS from the internet.
The connection to the SSRS is from your web servers, not from the internet

Connect to Sharepoint 2003 in C# WPF

I'm creating a WPF application that should list holiday details from a Sharepoint 2003 server. What would be the proper libraries to use? Am I relegated to COM objects or do .NET libraries exist that are compatible with SP 2003?
There are 2 ways:
a. Using Sharepoint web services
Suppose your sharepoint server URL is as follows
https://MyDomain/MySite/default.aspx
Then replace default.aspx with /_vti_bin/lists.asmx to get list of web services expose by sharepoint.
https://MyDomain/MySite/_vti_bin/lists.asmx
This will provide you with list of all operations exposed by service.
You can use GetList to get calendar list and check if you get desired result.
b. Uisng Sharepoint object model and Microsoft.Sharepoint.dll (WPF application can run on same server where sharepoint is installed)

What assemblies do need to add/change to deploy silverlight web application to Windows Azure [Error]?

I have a silverlight based application consisting of charts using silverlight toolkit and connected to database using RIA Services (Domain Service class, ADO.NET entity model). I want to deploy it to my windows azure account online.
I recently encountered
Instance 1 of role Website is busy
Instance 1 of role Website is cycling
I encountered this issue again and again.
Note : My Windows Azure SDK is updated and I already deployed a MVC based application.
This SOF answer guides that i should add these assemblies : https://stackoverflow.com/a/8966859/1319922
But these are for MVC based project and mine is Silverlight based (using C#).
Is there any assemblies left which i need to add ? Also my project works fine in Local Host.
Also do i need to set some assemblies CopyLocal = true ? And if YES which ones ?
Why i am not able to deploy my app (and getting above error), Is there any other issue ?
Please Reply
Thanks
Since you're using RIA Services it's possible that these assemblies are not available on your Web Role. To view all assemblies available on Web Roles, follow this link: http://gacviewer.cloudapp.net/
You should double check with the assemblies in your ASP.NET Web Role (the one hosting the RIA Services application), and change all assemblies that you cant find on the gacviewer website to CopyLocal = true
Besides that, if you activate Remote Desktop on your Web Role, you can (for testing purposes) connect through RDP and take a look at the event viewer to see what assemblies are missing.

Adding SharePoint screen to legacy c# application

We have an Enterprise application written in C# that we well to customers. The server runs in our data center and the customers connect via a windows application also written in C#. Pretty standard.
Management would like a dashboard added to our application. I was told to look into using sharepoint to somehow add a sharepoint dashboard to the main screen of our client application (winforms).
Is this possible? The client application would have to somehow show a web page from the sharepoint server which I guess is no problem using a html componenent. But I'm more worried about getting sharepoint to work with our existing data (sql server 2008).
I suggested just writing the dashboard ourselves and avoiding sharepoint. But management would like to add more 'Business Intelligence' to our application. I know that is the way of the future but I'm worried about the complexity of integration with sharepoint.
There are various options for integrating SharePoint into a windows forms application. The simplest is embedding a web browser control and point it to the page with the dashboard set up.
Alternatively you could use the SharePoint client object model (2)(make calls to the SharePoint server) and retrieve data (and potentially pages) from SharePoint to put into your dashboard.
I would recommend to management that we can display SharePoint through our current application, and we can demonstrate with a simple dashboard part (eg chart control) to demonstrate how we can make the dashboard integrate more naturally over time piece by piece. This would minimise risk by displaying from SharePoint, while being able to show the potential advantages of using the SharePoint data and creating a customised windows forms dashboard.
SharePoint does a good job of going either way with information via BCS, assuming you would want to show LOB data in a SharePoint deployment.
However, since you want to go the other way, the Client Object Model works well with this. Seeing as how it is a .NET application, I can site specific times where we have used the built in REST services to get information from lists in our enterprise SharePoint deployments.
Security will need to be addressed as well, so don't forget about that. If you have AD groups already set up for your enterprise application, you can most likely reuse some of those in SharePoint. If you don't, you will have to now manage how data will be secured. You may also end up getting prompted for a log in to SP which is never a good user experience.
Good luck!

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