I am porting an old 32-bit COM
component that was written in VB6
for the purpose of reading and writing to an Active Directory
server. The new solution will be in C#
and will use SQL CLR
user functions.
The assembly that I am trying to deploy to SQL Server
contains a reference to System.DirectoryServices
. The project does compile without any errors but I am unable to deploy the assembly to the SQL Server
because of the following error:
Error: Assembly 'system.directoryservices, version=2.0.0.0, culture=neutral, publickeytoken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a.' was not found in the SQL catalog.
What are the correct steps for registering System.DirectoryServices
on SQL Server?
The information provided from other answers led me to the solution. Here are the steps I came up with for future reference:
CREATE ASSEMBLY [System.DirectoryServices]
FROM 'C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v2.0.50727\System.DirectoryServices.dll'
WITH PERMISSION_SET = UNSAFE
GO
The first time I ran the statement above I got the following error:
CREATE ASSEMBLY for assembly 'System.DirectoryServices' failed because assembly 'System.DirectoryServices' is not authorized for PERMISSION_SET = UNSAFE. The assembly is authorized when either of the following is true: the database owner (DBO) has UNSAFE ASSEMBLY permission and the database has the TRUSTWORTHY database property on; or the assembly is signed with a certificate or an asymmetric key that has a corresponding login with UNSAFE ASSEMBLY permission.
In order to get the CREATE ASSEMBLY statement to execute without error I had to first turn TRUSTWORTHY ON as follows:
ALTER DATABASE DatabaseName SET TRUSTWORTHY ON
GO
Once TRUSTWORTHY is turned ON, the command executed without error but it did present this scary sounding warning:
Warning: The Microsoft .NET Framework assembly 'system.directoryservices, version=2.0.0.0, culture=neutral, publickeytoken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a, processorarchitecture=msil.' you are registering is not fully tested in the SQL Server hosted environment and is not supported. In the future, if you upgrade or service this assembly or the .NET Framework, your CLR integration routine may stop working. Please refer SQL Server Books Online for more details.
With System.DirectoryServices properly registered in SQL Server I am now able to deploy/register the dependent custom SQL CLR assembly without any problems.
Does that article here help??
New "SQLCLR-approved" assembly in SP1
People often ask about the set of base
class library assemblies that can be
safely used in SQLCLR. It usually
takes the form "can I use assembly
System.XYZ.dll in SQLCLR procedural
code" or "why do I get "assembly
System.XYZ.dll is not found" when I
try and catalog my own assembly that
calls this one? The ones is hear
mentioned most frequently is
System.DirectoryServices.dll (Active
Directory support) or
System.Management.dll (WMI support) or
System.Remoting.dll et al. The only
way you use these is to run CREATE
ASSEMBLY on them yourself, which
involves using PERMISSION_SET =
UNSAFE. And cataloging all the
dependencies. Not for the faint of
heart.
Also - SQL Server CLR doesn't support every imagineable assembly - find lists here:
- for SQL Server 2005 SQL-CLR
- for SQL Server 2008 SQL-CLR
One note from that second MSDN article:
Unsupported Libraries
Unsupported libraries can still be called from your managed stored procedures,
triggers, user-defined functions, user-defined types, and user-defined aggregates.
The unsupported library must first be registered in the SQL Server database,
using the CREATE ASSEMBLY statement, before it can be used in your code.
Any unsupported library that is registered and run on the server should be
reviewed and tested for security and reliability.
For example, the System.DirectoryServices namespace is not supported.
You must register the System.DirectoryServices.dll assembly with UNSAFE
permissions before you can call it from your code. The UNSAFE permission
is necessary because classes in the System.DirectoryServices namespace
do not meet the requirements for SAFE or EXTERNAL_ACCESS. For more
information, see CLR Integration Programming Model Restrictions and
CLR Integration Code Access Security.
Does this help: Creating an Assembly in SQL Server?
Honestly, I don't know much about the use of the SQL Server CLR. So if this helps, I shall stick to it to learn myself. =)
EDIT #1
Here's another interesting link on the subject.
SQL Server 2005 CLR integration and assembly registering troubles
I hope this helps!
Would like to add that, I spent a day trying to register an assembly using asymmetric key signed DLL failing with the error.
. . . is not authorized for PERMISSION_SET = UNSAFE. The assembly is authorized when . . .
CREATE ASYMMETRIC KEY AsyKeyName FROM executable FILE = 'C:\Program Files\...'
Later only to find out that SQL server do not like paths with spaces in between!!