2

I wrote the following that does work, but want to know if there is any more efficient ways to get all users without any role.

using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Web.Security;

public static IEnumerable<MembershipUser> GetUsersHavingNoRole() {
  var allUsers = Membership.GetAllUsers().Cast<MembershipUser>();
  foreach (var user in allUsers) {
    if (Roles.GetRolesForUser(user.UserName).Length.Equals(0)) {
      yield return user;
    }
  }
}

3 Answers 3

2

I'd expect there to usually be more users than roles - so it might make sense to iterate over the roles (return by Roles.GetAllRoles()), build up a list of users in any of those roles (e.g. by creating a HashSet<string> and adding the users for each role returned by Roles.GetUsersInRole), and then finding the difference between that and all the users. So if you're using LINQ, you could use:

var usersInRolesQuery = Roles.GetAllRoles()
                             .SelectMany(role => Roles.GetUsersInRole(role));

var usersInRoles = new HashSet<string>(usersInRolesQuery);
return Membership.GetAllUsers()
                 .Cast<MembershipUser>()
                 .Where(user => !usersInRoles.Contains(user.UserName));

Of course that's still dealing with the same amount of data - but it may mean fewer roundtrips to whatever datastore is involved.

Have you benchmarked the application to find out how expensive your current method is?

2
  • Usually more users than roles, you mean? ;) Mar 30, 2011 at 6:12
  • This is nice; I've learned from it. I haven't benchmarked--my user-base is so small it wouldn't make any difference, but I like to learn the better techniques. Maybe for a larger application, the method could compare the number of users to roles up-front before using either method, but like you said, users are almost always going to outnumber roles unless you have a LOT of unused roles. Mar 30, 2011 at 6:25
0

Depending on the amount of users, roles and relations in between them and the number of times you need this information, it might be worth it (had enough disclaimers yet?) to add an extra method to the (custom)Role Provider.

The native query that is required in the provider could be much more efficient than using LINQ the way you are doing now.

A lot depends on the factors in first line of this answer but also on the provider. Maintainability might also be an issue as you are adding a query that might not be supported in the future (next version of the provider)

2
  • Thanks for this. I suppose the number of users would be well into the thousands (or hundreds of thousands?) to get too concerned. In that case, I guess it'd be easier to automatically assign a default role to all new users and eliminate the need to worry about this category of user. Mar 30, 2011 at 6:44
  • :) That is what I do. Although it would have been nice if the API allowed us to query for the users without roles.
    – Emond
    Mar 30, 2011 at 11:55
0

If I understand your question properly. This code should help!

MembershipUserCollection users = Membership.GetAllUsers();
MembershipUserCollection usersNoRoles = new MembershipUserCollection();

    foreach (MembershipUser user in users)
    {
        string[] roles = Roles.GetRolesForUser(user.UserName);

        // if roles empty
        if (roles.Count() == 0)
        {
            // Add User to a List for User with no Roles
            usersNoRoles.Add(user);
        }

   }
1
  • Thanks, but I fail to see how this an improvement over the starting code. Jul 7, 2011 at 6:01

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