Implementing a Progress bar for long running task implemented with an ASP.NET MVC 2 AsyncController

最后都变了- 提交于 2019-11-27 19:08:51
Victor Haydin

Very interesting question! Actually it seems that it is not a task for AsyncController. Async controllers are designed for long-running single-HTTP-query operations at server-side. When you are using async action, this could only help you to release ASP.Net worker thread during some long-running operation(s) and allow it to serve other requests while operation is performed. But from client-side point of view it doesn't matter, is this async controller or not. For client this is just single HTTP request.

You need to redesign this using some long-running queries service in your application. Here is example of controller, that could serve such workflow:

public class LongOperationsController : Controller
{
    public ActionResult StartOperation(OperationData data)
    { 
        Guid operationId = Guid.NewGuid(); // unique identifier for your operation
        OperationsService.DoStartOperation(operationId, data); // service starts to perform operation using separate thread
        return new JsonResult(operationId); // operation id should be sent to client to allow progress monitoring
    }

    public ActionResult GetOperationStatus(Guid operationId) 
    {
        var status = OperationsService.GetStatus(operationId); // this method returns some object, that describes status of operation (e.g. progress, current task etc.)
        return new JsonResult(status); // returning it to client
    }

    public ActionResult GetOperationResult(Guid operationId)
    {
        var result = OperationsService.GetOperationResult(operationId); // this should throw exception if operation is not yet completed
        return new JsonResult(result);
    }

    public ActionResult ClearOperation(Guid operationId)
    {
        OperationsService.ClearOperationResult(operationId); // we should delete operation result if it was handled by client
        return true;
    }
}

And here are client-side code, that could interact with this controller:

var operationId;
function startOperation(data) {
    $.post('/LongOperations/StartOperation', data, function(response) {
        operationId = response; // store operationId
        startOperationMonitoring(); // start
    }, 'json');
}

function startOperationMonitoring() {
    // todo : periodically call updateOperationStatus() to check status at server-side
}

function updateOperationStatus() {
    // todo : get result of GetOperationStatus action from controller 
    // todo : if status is 'running', update progress bar with value from server, if 'completed' - stop operation monitoring and call finishOperation()
}

function finishOperation() {
    // todo : get result of GetOperationResult action from controller and update UI
    // todo : call ClearOperation action from controller to free resources
}

This is very basic concept, there are some missed items here, but I hope you will get the main idea. Also it's up to you how to design components of this system, for example:

  • use singleton for OperationsService, or not;
  • where and how long operation result should be stored (DB? Cache? Session?);
  • is it really required to manually release resources and what to do when client stopped to monitor operation (user closed browser) etc.

Best luck!

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