in my ASP .NET MVC2 application, there are two controller methods:
public class MyController : Controller{
public ActionResult Optimization(...){
//long running optimization
//this method writes to the Session
}
public void StopOptimization(){
//user wants to stop the optimization
//no access to Session needed
}
}
So in order to stop my long running optimization, the "Stop"-Method should be let through by ASP .NET MVC while the "Optimization"-Method is running.
I know that requests can be processed in parallel only if the SessionSate is at least set to "ReadOnly" for the whole controller class. I already followed the steps in this blog post. However, this implies that data cannot be written to the Session anymore, which is required by the Optimization-Method.
For this reason, I have decided to remove the "Stop"-Method from this Controller and put it in an extra Controller, for which I set the SessionState to "ReadOnly":
...
using Microsoft.Web.Mvc;
...
[ControllerSessionState(ControllerSessionState.ReadOnly)]
public class StopController: Controller
{
public void Stop()
{
//Stop long running optimization
}
}
However, the Stop-Request is still only processed after the Optimization in the other controller is completed. Additionally I tried to implement a custom controller factory that allows to define the session state for each ActionMethod separately - this is described here. This has not worked for me as I do not use ASP .NET MVC 3, but only ASP .NET MVC 2 in conjunction with the MVC Futures Library.
Does anyone have an idea how I can implement a Stop-Method that allows the user to stop my long running method from client-side?