1) Is it possible to use only these two features without the functionality of message based web service? ServiceStack need to be initialized, and it throws me an error when initialized twice (in both projects).
If you install the latest ServiceStack.Mvc NuGet package you will get the base ServiceStackController which is an MVC Controller providing convenient access to ServiceStack's built-in providers. Although you still need to auto-wire your controllers with the dependencies it needs, e.g. an injected ICacheClient
.
Although even if you're not using ServiceStack's WebFramework, having an AppHost is a convenient place to register your dependencies. ServiceStack is triggered by ASP.NET's IHttpHandler mappings specified in the Web.config, so if you don't have any mappings specified ServiceStack is never able to be called externally, but the registered dependencies are still able to be accessed internally with:
var cache = AppHost.Resolve<ICacheClient>(); //Get ICacheClient for SS IOC
2) Is it possible to split the implementation of ServiceStack between the two projects?
If you do have an AppHost, you cannot have more than one instance in a host project (by design) since an AppHost should be analogous to a host project where all your service dependencies should be registered and settings configured that apply to your entire web application or service.
You can however split the implementation of your services across multiple assemblies and have ServiceStack scan them all by specifying them in your AppHostBase constructor, e.g:
public class AppHost : AppHostBase
{
public AppHost() : base("My Service",
typeof(AServiceInDll1).Assembly, typeof(AServiceInDll2).Assembly/*, etc.*/){}
}
2) cont. I would like to maintain the process of authentication in the BL project using the ServiceStack's authentication providers, but handle all the UI/cookies by myself (or with the help of ServiceStack) in the mvc project.
Look at the ServiceStack.UseCases CustomAuthenticationMvc example project for an example of using MVC but authenticating with ServiceStack.
3) I would like to use ServiceStack's caching in the BL project, but I guess that I still need to maintain some session cookies to receive the session id. What is the right way to do it? Are there any built-in helper functions for this purpose?
You can use any of ServiceStack's Caching providers just like any other C# class, i.e. have your Business Logic binded to ICacheClient
and inject the concrete implementation in your IOC.
For sessions you can use the base.SessionAs<T>
method in the ServiceStack.Mvc ServiceStackController to access the session. To Save back the session you can use the IHttpRequest.SaveSession()
extension methods. Although both these methods require the ASP.NET context (it uses ASP.NET's HttpContext singleton if not provided) to work since it relies on ServiceStack's ss-id/ss-pid
cookies that are automatically instructed to be added on the client (by the server) whenever you access the Session.
If you don't want your business logic services to have a dependency on ASP.NET's System.Web
I recommend accessing and saving the session to be done in your controllers and passed to your business logic.
I recommend reading the Sessions Wiki Page for more background info on how ServiceStack's sessions work.
Integration of ASP.NET Context between ServiceStack and ASP.NET or MVC
I'll add this info since it's useful for anyone doing advanced integration between ServiceStack and ASP.NET or MVC as some of ServiceStack's extension methods rely on these built-in types.
You can create a ServiceStack IHttpRequest or IHttpResponse (within any HTTP/Controller request) with:
var ssHttpRequest = System.Web.HttpContext.Current.Request.ToRequest();
var ssHttpResponse = System.Web.HttpContext.Current.Response.ToResponse();
Finally you can create a complete request context (that encapsulates both a IHttpRequest and IHttpResponse) with:
var ssRequestContext = System.Web.HttpContext.Current.ToRequestContext();