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I'm working with some WebForms/MVC-agnostic tools, and I need to get an instance of HttpContext given a reference to an HttpContextBase object. I can't use HttpContext.Current because I need this to work asynchronously as well (HttpContext.Current returns null during an asynchronous request). I'm aware of HttpContextWrapper, but goes the wrong way.

3 Answers 3

260

The simplest way is to get the application, ApplicationInstance, and use its Context property:

// httpContextBase is of type HttpContextBase
HttpContext context = httpContextBase.ApplicationInstance.Context;

(thanks to Ishmael Smyrnow who noted this in the comments)

Original answer:

You can, especially if the HttpContextBase instance you've been handed is of type HttpContextWrapper at run-time. The following example illustrates how you can do this. It supposes you have a method called Foo that accepts context as HttpContextBase but then needs to call a method in a third-party assembly (that you may not have the good fortune to modify) that is expecting the context to be typed as HttpContext.

void Foo(HttpContextBase context) 
{
    var app = (HttpApplication) context.GetService(typeof(HttpApplication));
    ThirdParty.Bar.Baz(app.Context);
}

// Somewhere in assembly and namespace ThirdParty,
// in a class called Bar, there is Baz expecting HttpContext:

static void Baz(HttpContext context) { /* ... */ }

HttpContextBase has a method called GetService as a result of supporting IServiceProvider. The GetService override of HttpContextWrapper delegates to the GetService implementation of the wrapped HttpContext instance. The GetService implementation of HttpContext allows you to query for usual suspects like HttpApplication, HttpRequest, HttpResponse and so on. It just so happens that HttpApplication has a property called Context and which returns an instance of HttpContext. So one gets at the wrapped HttpContext instance by asking HttpContextBase for HttpApplication via GetService followed by reading the Context property of the returned HttpApplication instance.

Unlike HttpContextBase, GetService does not appear as a public member of HttpContext but that is because HttpContext implements IServiceProvider.GetService explicity while HttpContextBase doesn't.

Bear in mind that Foo is no longer testable because it relies on being able to unwrap the underlying HttpContext during testing and which is next to impossible to fake/stub in the first place. The point of this answer, however, is to address the question, “How do I get an HttpContext object from HttpContextBase?”, literally. The illustrated technique is useful in those situations where you find yourself sandwiched between components you don't necessarily have the luxury to modify.

5
  • 3
    Very interesting answer, just used it myself in MVC to pass the HttpContext from an Error Filter to ELMAH for logging. Feb 2, 2011 at 16:41
  • 1
    nice answer, bet that took a bit of digging? :) Jun 17, 2011 at 16:55
  • great answer! I utilized that especially in my Elmah to MVC controller github.com/alexanderbeletsky/elmah.mvc.controller/blob/master/… Aug 27, 2011 at 15:49
  • 39
    With an HttpContextBase, couldn't you call context.ApplicationInstance.Context? Oct 5, 2011 at 21:24
  • @IshmaelSmyrnow Darn it, don't how I missed that among all the Http*Base variations returned by HttpContextBase. :P I'll update the answer.
    – Atif Aziz
    Dec 12, 2011 at 11:06
30

You can,

var abstractContext = new System.Web.HttpContextWrapper(System.Web.HttpContext.Current);
1
  • 19
    -1 this is the wrong way, this gives you the Base when you have the Context, not the other way around. Feb 2, 2011 at 17:26
14

You can't.

The whole purpose of HttpContextBase is to abstract away the dependency on the concrete HttpContext class. While it may contain a concrete HttpContext (such as is the case with httpContextWrapper), other implementations may have absolutely nothing to do with HttpContext.

Your best option is to define a custom Abstract Factory that can get a HttpContextBase for you, since you can always wrap a concrete HttpContext in a HttpContextWrapper.

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  • 14
    This, by the way, was horribly done - I understand wanting to have a setup for unit tests, and I understand layers of abstraction - but WTH are you supposed to do when you want to use existing ASP.NET classes which expect an HttpContext? (like msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/…)
    – marq
    Jul 20, 2011 at 1:00
  • Yep to test IHttpHandler implementations you end you having to put a sill number of abstractions in (Response wrappers) just for your unit tests, which doesn't feel right but ends up being the only option.
    – Chris S
    Jul 3, 2013 at 17:13

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