1

I am using Linq-to-SQL with Unity in a Repository pattern. I am trying to add an interceptor for object security on the repository method [Securable]IQueryable<TEntity> List<TEntity>() that intercepts the call and returns only the entities that the user has rights to.

public class SecurableAttribute : HandlerAttribute
{...}

public class SecurableHandler : ICallHandler
{
    ...
    IMethodReturn Invoke(IMethodInvocation input, GetNextHandlerDelegate getNext)
    {
        var message = getNext()(input, getNext);
        var returnType = message.ReturnValue.GetType();
        if (typeof(IQueryable).IsAssignableFrom(returnType))
        {
            var entityType = returnType.GetGenericArguments().Single();
            var securableAttribute = entityType.GetAttribute<SecurableTypeAttribute>();
            if(securableAttribute != null)
            {
                //Build expression to filter the list from the attribute and primary key of the entity
                //Return the new IQueryable
            }
        }
        return message;
    }
}

I have built an expression, but I can't do message.ReturnValue.Where(expression) since the message.ReturnValue is object (message.ReturnValue is actually a System.Data.Linq.Table<TEntity>, but I don't want to be too tied to L2S), and it is at runtime so I can't cast it back to a generic and replace message.ReturnValue.

Alternatively, I tried

public interface ISecurable<TKey>
{
    TKey SecurityId { get; }
}

on the entity, which locks me in a bit, but I am OK with that if I could separate the remaining security aspects. This allows me to do the following in IMethodReturn Invoke(IMethodInvocation input, GetNextHandlerDelegate getNext) where I build the expression above:

if(typeof(ISecurableType).IsAssignableFrom(entityType))
{
    var secured = ((IQueryable<ISecurable>)message.ReturnValue).Where(expression);
    //Need to return secured as IQueryably<TEntity>
}

I now have to cast secured to IQueryable<ISecurable> but typeof(IQueryable<TEntity>).IsAssignableFrom(secured.GetType()) returns false, and swapping out the return value throws an exception, but it does seem to work with delayed execution as far as I can tell. (Also, I don't know TEntity at design time in SecurableHandler, but I do know the reflected type - but I have tried using the class declaration that I know it is in testing.)

Is there any way to modify the return results somehow? I am stuck needing to return a generic that I don't know at design time, thus making that impossible, but I also can't modify the expression (((IQueryable)message.ReturnType).Expression is declared as Expression Expression { get; }).

Is there any brilliance out there that could point me in a way that works?

tl;dr Need to return an IQueryable<TEntity> at runtime from an object that is a Table<TEntity> : IQueryable<TEntity> with an additional .Where(expression).

1 Answer 1

1

You can try creating a dynamic expression at runtime. You shouldn't have to explicitly cast the IQueryable back to it's generic type, as long as you don't change the element types with a "Select".

Example:

    public class SecurityHandler : ICallHandler
{
    public IMethodReturn Invoke(IMethodInvocation input, GetNextHandlerDelegate getNext)
    {
        var message = getNext()(input, getNext);
        var returnType = message.ReturnValue.GetType();
        if (typeof(IQueryable).IsAssignableFrom(returnType))
        {
            var entityType = returnType.GetGenericArguments().Single();

            var securableAttribute = entityType.GetAttribute<SecurableTypeAttribute>();
            if (securableAttribute != null)
            {
                //Build expression to filter the list from the attribute and primary key of the entity
                //Return the new IQueryable
                message.ReturnValue = AddWhereExpression(
                    (IQueryable)message.ReturnValue, 
                    securableAttribute.FilterValues,
                    securableAttribute.FilterPropertyName);
            }
        }
        return message;
    }

    public int Order { get; set; }

    private static IQueryable AddWhereExpression(IQueryable query, IEnumerable ids, string filterPropertyName)
    {
        // Build this expression:
        // item => ids.Contains(item.[PrimaryKeyPropertyName])

        var itemParameter = Expression.Parameter(query.ElementType, "item");

        var itemParameterProperty = Expression.Property(itemParameter, filterPropertyName);

        var listParameter = Expression.Constant(ids);

        var containsExpression = Expression.Call(
            typeof(System.Linq.Enumerable),
            "Contains",
            new[] { typeof(int) },
            listParameter,
            itemParameterProperty);

        var delegateTypeExpression = Expression.GetFuncType(new[] { query.ElementType, typeof(bool) });

        var whereExpression = Expression.Lambda(
            delegateTypeExpression,
            containsExpression,
            new[] { itemParameter }
            );

        Expression callWhere = Expression.Call(
                                     typeof(Queryable),
                                     "Where",
                                     new Type[] { query.ElementType },  // type args for Where<T>()
                                     query.Expression,
                                     whereExpression
                                     );

        return query.Provider.CreateQuery(callWhere);
    }
}

I am assuming your attribute will provide some array of allowable values.

Here are some extension methods that will help with this process:

public static class TypeExtensions
{       

    public static TAttribute GetAttribute<TAttribute>(this Type type)
    {
        var attributes = type.GetCustomAttributes(typeof(TAttribute), true);
        if (attributes.Length == 0) return default(TAttribute);
        return (TAttribute)attributes[0];
    }      

    public static PropertyInfo GetPropertyWithAttributeValue<TAttribute>(
        this IEnumerable<PropertyInfo> properties,
        Func<TAttribute, bool> findPredicate)
        where TAttribute : Attribute
    {
        var property = from p in properties
                       where p.HasAttribute<TAttribute>() &&
                       findPredicate.Invoke(p.GetAttribute<TAttribute>())
                       select p;

        return property.FirstOrDefault();
    }

    public static bool HasAttribute<TAttribute>(this PropertyInfo propertyInfo)
    {
        return propertyInfo.GetCustomAttributes(typeof(TAttribute), true).Any();
    }

    public static TAttribute GetAttribute<TAttribute>(this PropertyInfo propertyInfo)
    {
        var attributes = propertyInfo.GetCustomAttributes(typeof(TAttribute), true);
        if (attributes.Length == 0) return default(TAttribute);
        return (TAttribute)attributes[0];
    }
}

I haven't tried running this myself, but hopefully it's enough to get you started.

1
  • Great to hear. Happy to help. Jun 22, 2011 at 16:27

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.