public void BuildAssembly(AssemblyName pAssemblyName, string pNamespace, string pTypeName) { VelocityDBAccessBuilder lBuilder = new VelocityDBAccessBuilder(schema, sessionInfo); lBuilder.BuildAssembly(pAssemblyName, pNamespace, pTypeName, false); }
/// <summary> /// Displays a dialog prompting the user for connection details. The isNewConnection /// parameter will be true if the user is creating a new connection rather than editing an /// existing connection. This should return true if the user clicked OK. If it returns false, /// any changes to the IConnectionInfo object will be rolled back.</summary> public override bool ShowConnectionDialog(IConnectionInfo pCxInfo, bool pIsNewConnection) { VelocityDBProperties lProp; if (pIsNewConnection) { lProp = new VelocityDBProperties(pCxInfo) { Host = Dns.GetHostName(), WindowsAuth = false, PessimisticLocking = false }; } else lProp = new VelocityDBProperties(pCxInfo); bool? result = new ConnectionDialog(pCxInfo).ShowDialog(); if (result != true) return false; // This function, as well as GetSchemaAndBuildAssembly, runs on a separeted appdomain. But different from // GetSchemaAndBuildAssembly, pCxInfo gets persisted if true is returned. So this is the best (found) place to create // a list of dependencies. // Save already loaded assemblies. SchemaInfo lSchema = SchemaExtractor.Extract(lProp.ClassesFilenamesArray, lProp.DependencyFilesArray); SessionInfo lSessionInfo = new SessionInfo() { DBFolder = lProp.DBFolder, Host = lProp.Host, PessimisticLocking = lProp.PessimisticLocking, SessionType = lProp.SessionType, WindowsAuth = lProp.WindowsAuth }; VelocityDBAccessBuilder lBuilder = new VelocityDBAccessBuilder(lSchema, lSessionInfo); lBuilder.BuildAssembly(new AssemblyName("DummyName"), "DummyName", "DummyName", false); lProp.ActualDepencies = lSchema.LoadedAssemblies; return true; }