The simplest approach IMO would be to separate features by sets of pages that use security to determine which page a user gets. Beyond security and other means to ensure a user cannot get to a page directly to which they do not have access (site maps etc.), you could store in the database the list of features and which users or roles have access to that feature:
Create Table Features
(
Code varchar(10) not null Primary Key
, StartPage nvarchar(max) not null
, Description nvarchar(max) not null
)
Create Table UserFeatures
(
UserId ... not null
, FeatureCode varchar(10) References Features ( Code )
)
First, the reason I would use a text code for the feature primary key and not a surrogate key like an IDENTITY column or guid is that only the system will be querying for features. Users will never have the ability to arbitrarily add a feature. Thus, it makes your code much cleaner and easier to read to query for ...Where FeatureCode = 'AdvancedEntry'
than ...Where FeatureId = 13
.
Second, in this approach, the code of the pages themselves would determine which procedure to call. However, that may mean quite a bit of duplication if the features simply involve additional fields of information.
Thus, if the features are tightly integrated into the existing code base and presentation layer (which by the way is why versioning is so difficult), an alternate approach would be to store the name of the stored procedure that should be used in the Features
table. Your code would query join the above tables and return the stored procedure name that should be used. For the arguments, you could store a parameterized call in the database (e.g. exec Schema.Foo @bar, @gamma, @beta
) and when executing the query simply check whether that string contains a given parameter and if it does, add that parameter value:
if ( ProcTemplate.Contains( "@bar")
commandInstance.Parameters.AddWithValue( "@bar", barValue );
if ( ProcTemplate.Contains( "@gamma")
commandInstance.Parameters.AddWithValue( "@gamma", gammaValue );
...
If you map features to user roles or groups, then you will need to devise "trumping" rules which determine which feature should be used in the case of multiple being returned. In this approach, you would leave existing stored procedures alone barring a change to the schema which required a change to the stored procedure (e.g., the removal of a column). A bonus result of this approach is that you could add a date to the Features
table to determine when a new feature should go online.