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I am implementing a simple plugin architecture in an application. The plugin requirements are defined using an interface (IPlugin) that is in a *.dll that is referenced by the application and the plugin. The application has a plugin manager (also in the same *.dll) which loads the plugins by looking for all the *.dll's in a plugins folder, loads them, then checks that the plugin implements the interface. I have done this checking two different ways [previously by a simple if (plugin is IPlugin)], but neither one will recognize when a plugin implements the interface. Here's the code:

Assembly pluginAssembly = Assembly.LoadFrom(currFile.FullName);
if (pluginAssembly != null)
{
    foreach (Type currType in pluginAssembly.GetTypes())
    {
        if (currType.GetInterfaces().Contains(typeof(IPlugin)))
        {
            // Code here is never executing
            // even when the currType derives from IPlugin
        }
    }                    
}

I used to test a particular class name ("Plugin"), but then I allowed it to cycle through all the classes in the assembly to no avail. (This follows an example that I found elsewhere.) To make this a little more complicated, there are two interfaces each of which implements the original interface (IPluginA, IPluginB). The plugin actually implements one of the more specific interfaces (IPluginB). However, I have tried it with the plugin just implementing the more general interface (IPlugin), and this still does not work.

[Edit: in response to the two responses that I first received] Yes, I have tried using IsAssignableFrom. See the following:

Assembly pluginAssembly = Assembly.LoadFrom(currFile.FullName);
if (pluginAssembly != null)
{
    foreach (Type currType in pluginAssembly.GetTypes())
    {
        if (typeof(IPlugin).IsAssignableFrom(currType))
        {
            string test = "test";
        }
    }
}
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A larger code sample would help understand the actual problem. I am pretty sure IsAssignableFrom is working for me, as I write this, in my app - exactly as expected. – Charles Prakash Dasari Aug 13 at 2:06
Please check whether the currFile is the DLL containing plugins & also see what currType is for each of the types in the plugin assembly. – shahkalpesh Aug 13 at 2:07
The currFile is the *.dll containing the plugin, and the currType is (the only type in the assembly), which is a Plugin which implements IPlugin. In other words, those are correct. Any other ideas? – Tim Aug 13 at 2:13

2 Answers

vote up 4 vote down check

Have you tried:

typeof(IPlugin).IsAssignableFrom(currType)

Also, types implement interfaces, but they do not derive from them. The BaseType property and IsSubclassOf method show derivation, where IsAssignableFrom shows derivation or implementation.

Edit: are your assemblies signed? They could be loading side-by-side versions of your assembly, and since Type objects are compared with ReferenceEquals, the same type in two side-by-side assemblies would be completely independent.

Edit 2: Try this:

public Type[] LoadPluginsInAssembly(Assembly otherAssembly)
{
    List<Type> pluginTypes = new List<Type>();
    foreach (Type type in otherAssembly.GetTypes())
    {
        // This is just a diagnostic. IsAssignableFrom is what you'll use once
        // you find the problem.
        Type otherInterfaceType =
            type.GetInterfaces()
            .Where(interfaceType => interfaceType.Name.Equals(typeof(IPlugin).Name, StringComparison.Ordinal)).FirstOrDefault();

        if (otherInterfaceType != null)
        {
            if (otherInterfaceType == typeof(IPlugin))
            {
                pluginTypes.Add(type);
            }
            else
            {
                Console.WriteLine("Duplicate IPlugin types found:");
                Console.WriteLine("  " + typeof(IPlugin).AssemblyQualifiedName);
                Console.WriteLine("  " + otherInterfaceType.AssemblyQualifiedName);
            }
        }
    }

    if (pluginTypes.Count == 0)
        return Type.EmptyTypes;

    return pluginTypes.ToArray();
}
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I have tried using IsAssignableFrom, but it isn't working either. See my edit in the original question. – Tim Aug 13 at 1:57
I don't think assemblies are signed (GAC). OP says, he is trying to load it from plugins folder. – shahkalpesh Aug 13 at 2:14
They are not signed (not in the GAC). – Tim Aug 13 at 2:17
What? I didn't say GAC at all. I sign my assemblies but no way do I put them in the GAC. – 280Z28 Aug 13 at 2:20
Please interpret as "(and not in the GAC)." Would signing them help? – Tim Aug 13 at 2:26
show 6 more comments
vote up 2 vote down

The method IsAssignableFrom is what you are looking for:

Type intType = typeof(IInterface);
foreach (Type t in pluginAssembly.GetTypes())
{
    if (intType.IsAssignableFrom(t))
    {
    }
}
link|flag
I have tried using IsAssignableFrom, but it isn't working either. See my edit in the original question. – Tim Aug 13 at 1:58

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