I'm trying to scan an assembly for types implementing a specific interface using code similar to this:

public List<Type> FindTypesImplementing<T>(string assemblyPath)
{
    var matchingTypes = new List<Type>();
    var asm = Assembly.LoadFrom(assemblyPath);
    foreach (var t in asm.GetTypes())
    {
        if (typeof(T).IsAssignableFrom(t))
            matchingTypes.Add(t);
    }
    return matchingTypes;
}

My problem is, that I get a ReflectionTypeLoadException when calling asm.GetTypes() in some cases, e.g. if the assembly contains types referencing an assembly which is currently not available.

In my case, I'm not interested in the types which cause the problem. The types I'm searching for do not need the non-available assemblies.

The question is: is it possible to somehow skip/ignore the types which cause the exception but still process the other types contained in the assembly?

link|improve this question

1  
It may be a lot more of a rewrite than what you're looking for, but MEF gives you similar functionality. Just mark each of your classes with an [Export] tag that specifies the interface it implements. Then you can import only those interfaces that you are interested in at the time. – Drew Burchett Oct 25 '11 at 12:33
@Drew, Thanks for your comment. I was thinking about using MEF, but wanted to see if there is another, cheaper solution. – M4N Oct 25 '11 at 12:41
Giving the plugin class factory a well-known name so you can just use Activator.CreateInstance() directly is a simple workaround. Nevertheless, if you get this exception now due to an assembly resolution problem then you'll probably get it later as well. – Hans Passant Oct 25 '11 at 12:54
@Hans: I'm not sure I completely understand. The assembly I'm scanning might contain any number of types implementing the given interface, so there is not one well-known type. (and also: I'm scanning more than one assembly, not only one) – M4N Oct 25 '11 at 13:03
feedback

2 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

One fairly nasty way would be:

Type[] types;
try
{
    types = asm.GetTypes();
}
catch (ReflectionTypeLoadException e)
{
    types = e.Types;
}
foreach (var t in types.Where(t => t != null))
{
    ...
}

It's definitely annoying to have to do this though. You could use an extension method to make it nicer in the "client" code:

public static IEnumerable<Type> GetLoadableTypes(this Assembly assembly)
{
    // TODO: Argument validation
    try
    {
        return assembly.GetTypes();
    }
    catch (ReflectionTypeLoadException e)
    {
        return e.Types.Where(t => t != null);
    }
}

You may well wish to move the return statement out of the catch block - I'm not terribly keen on it being there myself, but it probably is the shortest code...

link|improve this answer
Thanks, that seems to be a solution (and I agree, it doesn't seem to be a clean solution). – M4N Oct 25 '11 at 12:43
feedback

Have you considered Assembly.ReflectionOnlyLoad ? Considering what you're trying to do, it might be enough.

link|improve this answer
Yes I had considered that. But I didn't use it because otherwise I would have to manually load any dependencies. Also the code would not be executable with ReflectionOnlyLoad (see Remarks section on the page you linked). – M4N Oct 25 '11 at 19:10
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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