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SharePoint 2010 Tools in Visual Studio 2010

SharePoint 2010 Tools in Visual Studio 2010. Becky Bertram SharePoint MVP http://blog.beckybertram.com @ beckybertram. VS 2008 with SP2010 VS 2010 with SPS 2010. Solution Package framework has not changed from SharePoint 2007 to SharePoint 2010

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SharePoint 2010 Tools in Visual Studio 2010

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  1. SharePoint 2010 Tools in Visual Studio 2010 Becky Bertram SharePoint MVP http://blog.beckybertram.com @beckybertram

  2. VS 2008 with SP2010VS 2010 with SPS 2010 • Solution Package framework has not changed from SharePoint 2007 to SharePoint 2010 • You can develop a SharePoint 2010 solution package with Visual Studio 2008, it’s just a lot more work. • You can develop a SharePoint 2007 solution package with Visual Studio 2010, but you won’t be using the built-in tools. You’d use the same manual techniques you would in VS 2008.

  3. SP Dev 101: Solutions and Solution Packages • SharePoint has some assets which reside in the database, other assets on the file system (XML files, ASPX pages, DLL’s, etc.) • SharePoint is scalable, which means it has load balanced servers. • Assets that were deployed to one server need to be deployed to all load balanced servers. • Solution packages allow the systematic deployment and retraction of assets. • Solution packages are simply CAB files with a WSP extension.

  4. SP Dev 101: Solution Package Events • Solution Packages must first be added to the Solution Store so that SharePoint knows they’re available. • This can only be done via PowerShell. • You can add a solution package using the stsadm –o addsolution command. • From there, you can deploy a Solution Package, either through the browser or through PowerShell. • Packages are deployed globally (which means they are available in the whole farm) or to one or more Web applications. • Packages can be retracted, and then removed.

  5. SP Dev 101: Solution Manifest • The Solution Manifest file is an XML file that tells SharePoint where to place files on the file system. • Whether assemblies should go in the bin directory in the web application folder or in the GAC. • If certain DLL’s should be declared “safe” so that SharePoint will permit their execution in the browser. • Where assets should be placed in the “14 hive”. • Which features are being deployed as a part of the Solution. • Whether the Web server should be reset when the package is installed.

  6. SP Dev 101: Sample Manifest <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?> <Solution xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/sharepoint/" SolutionId="c155b5f5-94cb-4044-9944-95e504c15b99" SharePointProductVersion="14.0"> <Assemblies> <Assembly Location="MyFirstFeature.dll" DeploymentTarget="GlobalAssemblyCache"> <SafeControls> <SafeControl Assembly="MyFirstFeature, Version=1.0.0.0, Culture=neutral,PublicKeyToken=51d041b4f66380dc“ Namespace="MyFirstFeature.MyFirstWebPart" TypeName="*" /> </SafeControls> </Assembly> </Assemblies> <TemplateFiles> <TemplateFile Location="CONTROLTEMPLATES\MyFirstFeature\MyFirstWebPart\MyFirstUserControl.ascx" /> </TemplateFiles> <FeatureManifests> <FeatureManifest Location="MyFirstFeature_MyFirstFeature\Feature.xml" /> </FeatureManifests> </Solution>

  7. Farm vs. Sandboxed Solutions • Farm Features can only be deployed by an administrator. Farm features generally run in the IIS worker process (w3wp.exe) • Sandboxed solutions can be uploaded and deployed by a Site Collection administrator. These solutions can use a limited API that prevents access of objects above the Site Collection level. Sandboxed solutions run in their own process (SPUCWorkerProcess.exe)

  8. SP Dev 101: Features • A Feature is a unit of functionality in SharePoint. • The set of functionality contained in the feature becomes available when it’s activated. • Features can be activated in the browser or using PowerShell. • Features have a particular scope(Farm, Web application, Site Collection, or Web site) and can be reused in that scope. • Features can have dependencies on other Features.

  9. SP Dev 101: Feature Event Receivers • Events are fired for the following 5 events in a Feature’s “life”: • Installed • Activated • Uninstalling • Deactivating • Upgrading • Each of these has a corresponding event receiver. • The “-ing” receivers hand the event before the event, and the “-ed” receivers hand the event after the event.

  10. Feature Upgrading • New to SharePoint 2010, you can tell SharePoint to carry out certain actions when upgrading a Feature to a newer version of that Feature. • Includes adding additional fields to a Content Type • Executing particular code (making note of the fact that the code will execute as the SharePoint System account.)

  11. SP Dev 101: Feature Manifest • The Feature Manifest is an XML file that tells SharePoint which files on the file system are a part of the Feature, as well as information about the Feature itself, such as: • Name • Scope • Activation Dependencies • Upgrade actions • Feature Event Receiver assembly and class • Language Resource Files

  12. SP Dev 101: Sample Feature Manifest <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?> <Feature xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/sharepoint/" Title="My First Feature" Description="This Feature deploys a Web Part to the Web Part Gallery." Id="f6e83dea-5146-43c3-af18-d9aecb9f4a7c" Scope="Site"> <ElementManifests> <ElementManifest Location="MyFirstWebPart\Elements.xml" /> <ElementFile Location="MyFirstWebPart\MyFirstWebPart.webpart" /> </ElementManifests> </Feature>

  13. SP Dev 101: Declarative vs. Imperative Programming • Declarative: using XML configuration files to tell SharePoint what to provision • Field, Content Type, List Definition, List Instance, Module, etc. • Imperative: using the SharePoint API to execute commands at a given point in time • SPField, SPContentType, SPList, SPListItem, etc.

  14. VS 2010: Microsoft SharePoint Development Tools Included with Visual Studio 2010

  15. VS 2010 Project Item Templates • Web Part • Sequential Workflow • State Machine Workflow • Business Data Connectivity Model • Application Page • Event Receiver • List Definition • List Definition from Content Type • List Instance • Content Type • Module • Empty Element • User Control • Import Reusable Workflow • Import SharePoint Solution Package

  16. VS 2010 Project Item Templates

  17. Demo: Creating a Feature and Solution Package using Visual Studio 2010

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