Is it possible to figure out the currently executing controller/action in OnActionExecuting?
7 Answers
You could try the ActionDescriptor
of the ActionExecutingContext
as follows:
protected override void OnActionExecuting(ActionExecutingContext filterContext)
{
string actionName = filterContext.ActionDescriptor.ActionName;
string controllerName = filterContext.ActionDescriptor.ControllerDescriptor.ControllerName
.....
base.OnActionExecuting(filterContext);
}
You can use ActionDescriptor
of ActionExecutingContext
protected override void OnActionExecuting(ActionExecutingContext filterContext)
{
var descriptor = filterContext.ActionDescriptor;
var actionName = descriptor.ActionName;
var controllerName = descriptor.ControllerDescriptor.ControllerName;
......
base.OnActionExecuting(filterContext);
}
For ASP.NET Core, Use the following,
var controllerName = ((ControllerBase)filterContext.Controller)
.ControllerContext.ActionDescriptor.ControllerName;
var actionName = ((ControllerBase)filterContext.Controller)
.ControllerContext.ActionDescriptor.ActionName;
You could look at the RouteData
:
Request.RequestContext.RouteData.Values["Controller"];
Request.RequestContext.RouteData.Values["Action"];
ActionExecutingContext context this is going to be your context....
var actionName = ((Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Controllers.ControllerActionDescriptor)context.ActionDescriptor).ActionName;
var controllerName = ((Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Controllers.ControllerActionDescriptor)context.ActionDescriptor).ControllerName;
-
3
var controllerName = (string)routingValues["controller"];
var actionName = (string)routingValues["action"];
I guess you use Attributes (e.g. ActionFilterAttribute
), if it so, you can get
action name form attribute constructor:
public CustomProfileAttribute([CallerMemberName] string caller = null) { _actionName = caller; }
controller name:
public CustomProfileAttribute([CallerMemberName] string caller = null) { _controllerName = context.Controller.ToString()
or both controller and action:
public override void OnActionExecuting(ActionExecutingContext context) { var controllerAndAction = context.ActionDescriptor.DisplayName;
but in such case you will have som ugly name like
controller.action (action)