6

I'm new to Caliburn.Micro and I'm wondering what is the best way to handle user Login/Logout cycles in my application. I saw some suggestions online to implement this using an empty Shell-View which switches between the LoginView and the main application view, each with a custom ViewModel of course.

I don't really like this solution, because for me these are 2 separate windows with very different properties (Title, Icon, Size) and it seems an unclean solution two change one window to look like the other. Another problem is, that the Login Window comes from an utility library which I don't control and which doesn't use Caliburn.Micro, it's a plain old Window which gives me an event when the user clicks "Login".

I also saw suggestions to display this Dialog in the Bootstrapper startup method, but the problem I see with that is that the user can choose to "Logout" of the application which should display the Login dialog again. It seems wrong to me to handle the switching between the Views in the Bootstrapper.

What I would like is to have some sort of ApplicationViewModel or ApplicationController which works like a Caliburn Conductor, but instead of switching between Views inside a Window, it should switch between the LoginWindow and the MainWindow and should also handle Closing of the whole application (which also requires a Logout). On Activation it would show the LoginWindow, handle the Login event and then switch to the Main Window (Shell). If the user chooses to "LogOut", the event should bubble up to the ApplicationViewModel/Controller again which would deactivate/close the MainWindow, perform the Logout and then show the LoginDialog again. Similar a Close event would do the Logout, but then Shutdown the whole application.

So my questions are:

  1. What do you think about this solution and do you have another/better one?
  2. How do I implement this? ;-)

Thanks a lot!

2
  • When you say "plain old Window" do you WPF or WinForms? Also does login Window do the actual work of authenticating a user or would you have to handle the "Login" event and do that?
    – Kioshiki
    Aug 20, 2012 at 17:15
  • 1
    WPF window and it raises a Login event which I handle using an authentication service that I get from my IoC container.
    – aKzenT
    Aug 20, 2012 at 21:09

2 Answers 2

19
+50

I think the solution to your problem is fairly easy.

In a nutshell you are creating one ViewModel as Shell which is represented with a Login Window when the application starts. If the user logs in successfully this window closes and the same instance of the viewModel is displayed in a Content Window. If the user is doing a logout, the Login Window is shown again.

First of all create an interface IShell which exposes two delegates LoginSuccessful and Logout

public interface IShell
    {
        Action LoginSuccessful { get; set; }
        Action Logout { get; set; }
    }

Next create a class ShellViewModel which implements IShell

 public class ShellViewModel : Screen, IShell
    {
        public ShellViewModel()
        {
            LoginSuccessful = delegate { };
            Logout = delegate { };
        }

        public Action LoginSuccessful { get; set; }
        public Action Logout { get; set; }

        public void DoLogin()
        {
            LoginSuccessful();
        }

        public void DoLogout()
        {
            Logout();
        }
    }

The methods DoLogin and DoLogout are Actions which can be bound to a Button or whatever control appropriate for you.

Next step is to override the OnStartupMethod in your Bootstrapper. This premises that you have an instance of the WindowManager and ShellViewModel exported by an IoC Framework of your choice.

protected override void OnStartup(object sender, StartupEventArgs e)
        {
            var windowManager = IoC.Get<IWindowManager>();
            var viewModel = IoC.Get<IShell>();

            viewModel.LoginSuccessful =
                () => GuardCloseAndReopen("Content");

            viewModel.Logout =
                () => GuardCloseAndReopen("Login");

            windowManager.ShowWindow(viewModel, "Login");
        }

        private void GuardCloseAndReopen(string shellViewMode)
        {
            var windowManager = IoC.Get<IWindowManager>();
            var shellScreen = IoC.Get<IShell>() as Screen;

            Application.ShutdownMode = ShutdownMode.OnExplicitShutdown;

            shellScreen.TryClose();

            Application.ShutdownMode = ShutdownMode.OnLastWindowClose;

            windowManager.ShowWindow(shellScreen, shellViewMode);
        }

The trick to this is: If the DoLogout method is called, the current window gets closed by calling TryClose on the ShellViewModel. At the same time you prevent the application from being shutdown by setting the Application.ShutdownMode to OnExplicitShutdown. Then using the windowmanager, you create another window in Login Mode by passing "Login" as Context information to the windowManager. This is actually the same ViewModel, however, with a different visual representation.

For Logout you are doing the same thing just around.

To get this working using Caliburn Conventions, you need a special project structure as seen here (and explained there): enter image description here

Now I challenge you to take this code and create a little sample application. Create a Login View (which does Login with a Button or whatever) and create a Content View with a Logout Button using the LoginSuccessful/ Logout Methods.

This will solve your issue with a minimum of Code and classes. Hope this will be helpful to you.

4
  • I'm interested in how this would work as well. In your example what is ShellViewMode? Should it be ShellViewModel or maybe just a string? Also aKzenT stated that the login window already existed so how might this affect your design?
    – Kioshiki
    Aug 18, 2012 at 19:00
  • ShellViewMode was a typo. Of course this is a string passing the context information to the window manager. You could also set this context to an enum, which would be a good idea. For the existing Login Window put this xaml to the Login.xaml and set the UI to the existing Actions in the viewModel. This may not be that complex because most of the time Login Dialogs are simply a Login/Cancel button with username/password textboxs. Autorisation can then be done by the ShellViewModel or extend the interface with some validation delegate to decouple this logic and make it changable during runtime. Aug 19, 2012 at 13:33
  • 1
    I thought that a string was right in this case, as you say an enum would be better. I think you've still not got the same idea as me with the existing login Window (I may have the wrong idea though). I am thinking of a situation where you have to use an existing Window from a binary assembly, maybe in a company they have a WPF Window or even a WindowsForms form that has to be used for the login process that exposes events etc (could be due to validation etc). I think that would make it quite hard to find a clean solution.
    – Kioshiki
    Aug 19, 2012 at 13:57
  • Nice solution, although like @Kioshiki mentioned I'm not sure I can apply it like this, because of the LoginWindow being in another assembly. Also I'm not sure if it's a good idea to "share" viewmodels here. For a login it might not matter, but imagine having to manage various complex windows. Sharing a view model between all of them might not be the best idea. Still, nice solution. Thanks!
    – aKzenT
    Aug 20, 2012 at 8:05
3

I've had a go at creating something that basically works but probably needs a bit more work to be really usable. The fully comments and source can be found on this post Caliburn.Micro Login Window sample on my website.

I used the IEventAggregator of Caliburn.Micro to control the transition between the two windows. You get this code to open the login screen:

public void Handle(LoginEvent message)
{
    LoginWindow loginWindow = new LoginWindow();
    loginWindow.Login += new EventHandler<LoginEventArgs>(this.LoginWindow_Login);
    loginWindow.Cancel += new EventHandler(LoginWindow_Cancel);
    loginWindow.ShowDialog();
}

this same source is used for both the first time the app opens and when the Logout event is published. the Logout event looks like this:

public void Handle(LogoutEvent message)
{
    Application.Current.ShutdownMode = ShutdownMode.OnExplicitShutdown;
    message.Source.TryClose();
    Application.Current.ShutdownMode = ShutdownMode.OnLastWindowClose;
    this.events.Publish(new LoginEvent());
}

When a login is successful it uses this code to open the main window which is based on a ViewModel:

ContentViewModel viewModel;
viewModel = IoC.Get<ContentViewModel>();
viewModel.Username = e.Username;
this.windowManager.ShowWindow(viewModel);

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.