I have code that runs as part of an event handler and need to create a new TOM.NET session (I can't reuse subject.Session
). This event handler is loaded into many Tridion processes (TcmServiceHost, COM+, Publisher, TcmTemplateDebugHost, IIS Application Pool) and these processes may:
- run under an identity that has access to Tridion (e.g. the COM+ application runs under MTSUser, which is a Tridion administrator)
- run under an identity that doesn't have access to Tridion, but is allowed to impersonate Tridion users (e.g. TcmServiceHost runs as NetworkService, which is configured as a Tridion Impersonation User).
I try to cater for both cases with this TOM.NET code:
Session session = null;
try
{
session = new Session();
}
catch (AccessDeniedException ex)
{
// this process doesn't have TCM access, so impersonate a user that does
session = new Session("Administator");
}
if (session != null)
{
var item = session.GetObject(id);
...
Is this the right way to check whether my code is running under a process that has access to Tridion (ignoring the fact that I hard-coded "Administrator")? The code works, but I just wonder if there is a more efficient way to perform a "has access to Tridion" check?
Note: the same question arises when I use the Core Service to access Tridion, so the question is not whether the TOM.NET is the right API to use here.