Ok so... I have a WPF application (let's call it Launcher.exe
) which loads and executes another WPF application (let's call it Loaded.exe
) dynamically using something like this:
Byte[] assemblyData;
using (BinaryReader reader = new BinaryReader(new FileStream(filePath, FileMode.Open)))
assemblyData = reader.ReadBytes(Convert.ToInt32(fs.Length));
Assembly assembly = Assembly.Load(assemblyData);
MethodInfo method = assembly.EntryPoint;
if (method != null)
{
Object instance = assembly.CreateInstance(method.Name);
method.Invoke(o, null);
}
Now... the problem is that Launched.exe
has its own settings in the file Loaded.exe.config
, and it also uses them in bindings. For example:
Topmost="{Binding Mode=TwoWay, Path=Topmost, Source={x:Static p:Settings.Default}}"
First question is, how can I make my dynamically loaded assembly properly load/bind/update and, more generally, use its own settings? I don't think it can handle this automagically...
Second question is: can Loaded.exe
communicate with Launcher.exe
? Let's say Loaded.exe
needs some data that only Launcher.exe
can retrieve... how can it ask for it? I think I need something like a proxy between the two assemblies, but I can't even figure out how to start coding this...
I supose you'll need to load a separate assembly with it's own .config file, no?
One way i do that is to load the assembly in a new AppDomain. You'll could deploy that assembly in a separate folder with all his needed references.
First setup the AppDomain, here you have a method:
AppDomain getAppDomainForAssembly(string assemblypath, string appdomainname)
{
//this._assembly_file = AssemblyFile;
string _assembly_file_name = System.IO.Path.GetFileName(assemblypath);
string _rootpath = System.IO.Path.GetDirectoryName(assemblypath);
//this._assembly_class_name = AssemblyClassNameToInstance;
AppDomainSetup _app_domain_info = new AppDomainSetup();
_app_domain_info.ApplicationBase = _rootpath;
_app_domain_info.PrivateBinPath = _rootpath;
_app_domain_info.PrivateBinPathProbe = _rootpath;
_app_domain_info.ConfigurationFile = _rootpath + @"\app.config"; //Here put the path to the correct .assembly .config file
AppDomain _app_domain = AppDomain.CreateDomain(
appdomainname, null, _app_domain_info);
return _app_domain;
}
Then get an instance of the object that executes the method on the assembly:
protected System.Reflection.Assembly _asm_resolve(string assemblyFile)
{
return System.Reflection.Assembly.LoadFrom(assemblyFile);
}
object getInstanceFromAppDomain(ref AppDomain appDomain,
string assemblyPath, string className = null)
{
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(className))
{
System.Reflection.Assembly assembly = _asm_resolve(assemblyPath);
System.Reflection.MethodInfo method = assembly.EntryPoint;
return appDomain.CreateInstanceFromAndUnwrap(assemblyPath, method.Name);
}
else
{
return appDomain.CreateInstanceFromAndUnwrap(assemblyPath, className);
}
}
Even if we know the Object Type, we could create a method with generic type:
T getInstanceFromAppDomain<T>(ref AppDomain appDomain,
string assemblyPath, string className = null)
{
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(className))
{
System.Reflection.Assembly assembly = _asm_resolve(assemblyPath);
System.Reflection.MethodInfo method = assembly.EntryPoint;
return (T)appDomain.CreateInstanceFromAndUnwrap(assemblyPath, method.Name);
}
else
{
return (T)appDomain.CreateInstanceFromAndUnwrap(assemblyPath, className);
}
}
And then, invoke the method on the created instance, wich is executing in the new appDomain:
void executeMethod(Type objecttype, string methodname, ref object instancedObject, object[] methodparams)
{
objecttype.InvokeMember(
methodname, System.Reflection.BindingFlags.InvokeMethod, null, instancedObject, methodparams);
}
You could use like this:
AppDomain newappdomain = getAppDomainForAssembly(filePath, "Loaded.exe.domain");
object loadedexe_object = getInstanceFromAppDomain(ref newappdomain,
filePath);
//If you know the method name to call...
executeMethod(loadedexe_object.GetType(), "methodname", ref loadedexe_object, null);
//or get entry point...
executeMethod(loadedexe_object.GetType(),
_asm_resolve(filePath).EntryPoint.Name, ref loadedexe_object, null);
For the second question, you could use NamedPipes, Remoting, WCF...
You need to implement interprocess communication on the same machine.
Take a look at MSDN documentaion, code sample covering this scenario with WCF
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.servicemodel.netnamedpipebinding.aspx
See this sample on CodeProject, using Remoting
Inter-process communication via Remoting