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18:35
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Q: Sending SignalR Broadcasts that is running within ASP.NET MVC Application from a Windows Service on the same server

CoultonI have an ASP.NET website that uses SignalR hubs to send messages to the website users. I have the code that calls the hubs within my business layer and I use dependency injection to inject the instances of the hubs up from my ASP.NET application to my business layer. The problem that I have co...

Is the code listed you connecting as a client or your attempt at broadcasting from the server?
The code listed is connecting as a client from a C# application. I would like to connect but to be able to broadcast from the server from a windows service that is running on the same server.
Ah, that is a little more tricky than I imagined, hmm I posted an answer but I am not sure how helpful it will be now ... still looking into though
No problem, thanks for taking the time to answer :o)
What if you connected as a client, sent a "message" to the server that then called aBroacastAll() type method?
18:35
I thought about doing that, but I'm not sure there would be a way to protect it from abuse as it would be accessible externally.
hello :)
Hey, so let me clarify, you want to broadcast from the service to all connected clients?
so service -> service_event happens -> service posts to serve -> server broadcast to all connected clients?
I'd want to send it to a specific user in the same way that I would within a hub
so is the problem sending from the service or sending to a specific user?
The problem is that I need to be able to send SignalR broadcasts from a windows service, when my ASP.NET MVC application (that already uses SignalR) is already running on the same server
My ASP.NET MVC application is already running,
18:39
and within my business layer I perform some actions that then fire off a broadcast to update the user.
This is fine within the ASP.NET application, because that is the project that is running the instance of SignalR in the first place.
why not have the service call a webAPI method on the server, the server validates this somehow, and then just broadcast to the appropriate client?
more detail: have a separate webAPI project within your solution and have that open up a POST method, that gets validated, and then calls another method that will broadcast to the specific user
hmm that might be an idea that!
Let me think about this for a second
I guess the only problem is that a separate WebAPI project would also suffer the same problem... it can't gain access to the SignalR hubs of the ASP.NET application
I have actually put together a similar project, you build your "receiver" out as a web API and then the windows service can just do a GET/PUT/POST/whatever and you can use all the fun built in stuff to validate it. Then just have a reference to your MVC project so you can call a method within that project that does have access to all the SignalR stuff
18:44
I already use WebAPI within my project, so maybe using the existing WebAPI setup is an option - that does have access to the hubs
yeah
you just use the webAPI project as a bridge to the parts of the project that do have access
and again webAPI/MVC has some built in protections you can use against abuse/spam
I'd have to be able to validate the that thing calling the WebAPI controller for this was genuinely the server
yeah, but you'd have to do that with anything honestly
hmmm
I'm just wondering how I validate the server to call my WebAPI methods
Any ideas?
yeah, that is a whole other question, gimme a second I'll see if I can find a quick link
long but comprehensive
added most of this info to my answer as well
hope it helped!
19:05
That WebAPI authorization stuff doesn't look easy at all
haha, not that I want everything to be easy pasy
Either a certificate or passing network credentials
19:27
Have you used authorization on your webapi controllers before?

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