C# – Writing C# Plugin System

cextensibilityplugins

I'm trying to write a plugin system to provide some extensibility to an application of mine so someone can write a plugin(s) for the application without touching the main application's code (and risk breaking something).

I've got the base "IPlugin" interface written (atm, nothing is implemented yet)

Here is how I'm loading:

public static void Load()
{
    // rawr: http://www.codeproject.com/KB/cs/c__plugin_architecture.aspx
    String[] pluginFiles = Directory.GetFiles(Plugins.PluginsDirectory, "*.dll");
    foreach (var plugin in pluginFiles)
    {
        Type objType = null;
        try
        {
            //Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly().GetName().Name
            MessageBox.Show(Directory.GetCurrentDirectory());
            Assembly asm = Assembly.Load(plugin);
            if (asm != null)
            {
                objType = asm.GetType(asm.FullName);
                if (objType != null)
                {
                    if (typeof(IPlugin).IsAssignableFrom(objType))
                    {
                        MessageBox.Show(Directory.GetCurrentDirectory());
                        IPlugin ipi = (IPlugin)Activator.CreateInstance(objType);
                        ipi.Host = Plugins.m_PluginsHost;
                        ipi.Assembly = asm;
                    }
                }
            }
        }
        catch (Exception e)
        {
            MessageBox.Show(e.ToString(), "Unhandled Exception! (Please Report!)", System.Windows.Forms.MessageBoxButtons.OK, System.Windows.Forms.MessageBoxIcon.Information);
        }
    }
}

A friend tried to help but I really didn't understand what was wrong.

The folder structure for plugins is the following:

\
\Plugins\

All plugins reference a .dll called "Lab.Core.dll" in the [root] directory and it is not present in the Plugins directory because of duplicate references being loaded.

The plugin system is loaded from Lab.Core.dll which is also referenced by my executable. Type "IPlugin" is in Lab.Core.dll as well. Lab.Core.dll is, exactly as named, the core of my application.

EDIT:

Question: Why/What is that exception I'm getting and how could I go about fixing it?

FINAL EDIT:

Ok so I decided to re-write it after looking at some source code a friend wrote for a TF2 regulator.

Here's what I got and it works:

    public class TestPlugin : IPlugin {
    #region Constructor

    public TestPlugin() {
        //
    }

    #endregion

    #region IPlugin Members

    public String Name {
        get {
            return "Test Plugin";
        }
    }

    public String Version {
        get {
            return "1.0.0";
        }
    }

    public String Author {
        get {
            return "Zack";
        }
    }

    public Boolean OnLoad() {
        MessageBox.Show("Loaded!");
        return true;
    }

    public Boolean OnAllLoaded() {
        MessageBox.Show("All loaded!");
        return true;
    }

    #endregion
}

        public static void Load(String file) {
        if (!File.Exists(file) || !file.EndsWith(".dll", true, null))
            return;

        Assembly asm = null;

        try {
            asm = Assembly.LoadFile(file);
        } catch (Exception) {
            // unable to load
            return;
        }

        Type pluginInfo = null;
        try {
            Type[] types = asm.GetTypes();
            Assembly core = AppDomain.CurrentDomain.GetAssemblies().Single(x => x.GetName().Name.Equals("Lab.Core"));
            Type type = core.GetType("Lab.Core.IPlugin");
            foreach (var t in types)
                if (type.IsAssignableFrom((Type)t)) {
                    pluginInfo = t;
                    break;
                }

            if (pluginInfo != null) {
                Object o = Activator.CreateInstance(pluginInfo);
                IPlugin plugin = (IPlugin)o;
                Plugins.Register(plugin);
            }
        } catch (Exception) {
        }
    }

    public static void LoadAll() {
        String[] files = Directory.GetFiles("./Plugins/", "*.dll");
        foreach (var s in files)
            Load(Path.Combine(Environment.CurrentDirectory, s));

        for (Int32 i = 0; i < Plugins.List.Count; ++i) {
            IPlugin p = Plugins.List.ElementAt(i);
            try {
                if (!p.OnAllLoaded()) {
                    Plugins.List.RemoveAt(i);
                    --i;
                }
            } catch (Exception) {
                Plugins.List.RemoveAt(i);
                --i;
            }
        }
    }

Best Answer

The Managed Extensibility Framework (MEF) is a new library in .NET that enables greater reuse of applications and components. Using MEF, .NET applications can make the shift from being statically compiled to dynamically composed. If you are building extensible applications, extensible frameworks and application extensions, then MEF is for you.

http://www.codeplex.com/MEF

Edit: CodePlex is going away - the code has been moved to Github for archival purposes only: https://github.com/MicrosoftArchive/mef

MEF is now a part of the Microsoft .NET Framework, with types primarily under the System.Composition. namespaces. There are two versions of MEF

  • System.ComponentModel.Composition, which has shipped with .NET 4.0 and higher. This provides the standard extension model that has been used in Visual Studio. The documentation for this version of MEF can be found here
  • System.Compostion is a lightweight version of MEF, which has been optimized for static composition scenarios and provides faster compositions. It is also the only version of MEF that is a portable class library and can be used on phone, store, desktop and web applications. This version of MEF is available via NuGet and is documentation is available here
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