27

I'd like to provide some way of creating dynamically loadable plugins in my software. Typical way to do this is using the LoadLibrary WinAPI function to load a dll and calling GetProcAddress to get an pointer to a function inside that dll.

My question is how do I dynamically load a plugin in C#/.Net application?

0

8 Answers 8

28

As of .NET 3.5 there's a formalized, baked-in way to create and load plugins from a .NET application. It's all in the System.AddIn namespace. For more information you can check out this article on MSDN: Add-ins and Extensibility

20

The following code snippet (C#) constructs an instance of any concrete classes derived from Base found in class libraries (*.dll) in the application path and stores them in a list.

using System.IO;
using System.Reflection;

List<Base> objects = new List<Base>();
DirectoryInfo dir = new DirectoryInfo(Application.StartupPath);

foreach (FileInfo file in dir.GetFiles("*.dll"))
{
    Assembly assembly = Assembly.LoadFrom(file.FullName);
    foreach (Type type in assembly.GetTypes())
    {
        if (type.IsSubclassOf(typeof(Base)) && type.IsAbstract == false)
        {
            Base b = type.InvokeMember(null,
                                       BindingFlags.CreateInstance,
                                       null, null, null) as Base;
            objects.Add(b);
        }
    }
}

Edit: The classes referred to by Matt are probably a better option in .NET 3.5.

8

Dynamically Loading Plug-ins

For information on how to dynamically load .NET assemblies see this question (and my answer). Here is some code for loading creating an AppDomain and loading an assembly into it.

var domain = AppDomain.CreateDomain("NewDomainName");
var pathToDll = @"C:\myDll.dll"; 
var t = typeof(TypeIWantToLoad);
var runnable = domain.CreateInstanceFromAndUnwrap(pathToDll, t.FullName) 
    as IRunnable;
if (runnable == null) throw new Exception("broke");
runnable.Run();

Unloading Plug-ins

A typical requirement of a plugin framework is to unload the plugins. To unload dynamically loaded assemblies (e.g. plug-ins and add-ins) you have to unload the containing AppDomain. For more information see this article on MSDN on Unloading AppDomains.

Using WCF

There is a stack overflow question and answer that describe how to use the Windows Communication Framework (WCF) to create a plug-in framework.

Existing Plug-in Frameworks

I know of two plug-in frameworks:

Some people talk about the Managed Extensibility Framework (MEF) as a plug-in or add-in framework, which it isn't. For more information see this StackOverflow.com question and this StackOverflow.com question.

0
5

One tip is to load all plugins and such into an own AppDomain, since the code running can be potentially malicious. An own AppDomain can also be used to "filter" assemblies and types that you don't want to load.

AppDomain domain = AppDomain.CreateDomain("tempDomain");

And to load an assembly into the application domain:

AssemblyName assemblyName = AssemblyName.GetAssemblyName(assemblyPath);
Assembly assembly = domain.Load(assemblyName);

To unload the application domain:

AppDomain.Unload(domain);
4

Yes, ++ to Matt and System.AddIn (a two-part MSDN magazine article about System.AddIn are available here and here). Another technology you might want to look at to get an idea where the .NET Framework might be going in the future is the Managed Extensibility Framework currently available in CTP form on Codeplex.

3

Basically you can do it in two ways.

The first is to import kernel32.dll and use LoadLibrary and GetProcAddress as you used it before:

[DllImport("kernel32.dll")]

internal static extern IntPtr LoadLibrary(String dllname);

[DllImport("kernel32.dll")]

internal static extern IntPtr GetProcAddress(IntPtr hModule, String procname);

The second is to do it in the .NET-way: by using reflection. Check System.Reflection namespace and the following methods:

First you load the assembly by it's path, then get the type (class) from it by it's name, then get the method of the class by it's name again and finally call the method with the relevant parameters.

2

The article is a bit older, but still applicable for creating an extensibility layer within your application:

Let Users Add Functionality to Your .NET Applications with Macros and Plug-Ins

1
  • Hmm, the link has unfortunately gone dead, which isn't as bad as it could be since you included the title, but nevertheless I'm not finding it in a quick google :-(
    – SamB
    Sep 10, 2015 at 21:44
0

This is my implementation, Inspired in this code avoiding to iterate over all assemblies and all types (or at least filtering with linQ). I just load the library and try to load the class which implemets a common shared interface. Simple and fast :)

Just declare an interface in a separated library and reference it in both, your system and your plugin:

public interface IYourInterface
{
    Task YourMethod();
}

In your plugin library, declare a class which implements IYourInterface

public class YourClass: IYourInterface
{
    async Task IYourInterface.YourMethod()
    {
        //.....
    }
}

In your system, declare this method

using System;
using System.Collections;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq.Expressions;
using System.Reflection;
using System.Linq;

public abstract class ReflectionTool<TSource> where TSource : class
{
    public static TSource LoadInstanceFromLibrary(string libraryPath)
    {
        TSource pluginclass = null;
        if (!System.IO.File.Exists(libraryPath))
            throw new Exception($"Library '{libraryPath}' not found");
        else
        {
            Assembly.LoadFrom(libraryPath);

            var fileName = System.IO.Path.GetFileName(libraryPath).Replace(".dll", "");
            var assembly = AppDomain.CurrentDomain.GetAssemblies().FirstOrDefault(c => c.FullName.StartsWith(fileName));
            var type = assembly.GetTypes().FirstOrDefault(c => c.GetInterface(typeof(TSource).FullName) != null);

            try
            {
                pluginclass = Activator.CreateInstance(type) as TSource;
            }
            catch (Exception ex)
            {
                LogError("", ex);
                throw;
            }
        }

        return pluginclass;
    }
}

And call it like this way:

IYourInterface instance = ReflectionTool<IYourInterface>.LoadInstanceFromLibrary("c:\pathToYourLibrary.dll");

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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