I have an issue with Silverlight application and SaveFileDialog.
Basically I'm using SaveFileDialog in order to get from user path where he wants to save file and what is the file name. Then I'm passing that path to an API of other application(I'm using Silverlight 5 in Elevated Trust mode) which creates file for me.
Problem arise when user uses IE8 in Protected Mode.
SaveFileDialog.SafeFileName returns just a name of the file, not the path, and when I try to get that path with FileInfo, I'm getting always desktop no matter what user has selected.
I tried different approaches, including write just one byte into the file using stream from the SaveFileDialog.OpenFile - no success
I tried to access private member of SaveFileDialog.File.DirectoryName using reflection - property is marked with [SecurityCritical] so I cannot access...
I'm planning now to try invoke native browser save dialog using js in order to accomplish this but I'm not sure it will be different than Silverlight dialog.
Anyone out there smarter or more experienced than me around this problem? :)
Thanks
Related
I have a webbrowser control in my application that is used to display pdf files that have been created in iTextSharp and are stored locally on the hard drive.
I would like to be able to navigate the file (next, previous, first, last, toc) from my application rather than using the inbuilt nav of the reader in the browser.
I have seen that you can navigate to specific pages by using
Browser.Navigate("filename.pdf#page=?);
This works the first time but when trying to navigate to a different page, it makes the browser disappear completely with no errors. However, I can reload the file without problem if I don't have the #page=? suffix on the file url though. Any ideas on this?
Alternatively, is there anyway in iTextSharp of adding something to the file to allow for it to be navigated from an external command?
All the official parameters that can be used to navigate through a PDF using parameters in the query string after the ? character are listed in a document published by Adobe: Parameters for Opening PDF Files
You already mentioned the page parameter. Another option could be using named destinations: nameddest=destination. In this case, you need to add the anchor with name destination to the file using iTextSharp.
Note that not all viewers implement these parameters. Adobe supports them in Adobe Reader and in the Adobe Reader plug-in, but there is no guarantee that they will work in pdf.js (Firefox), Pdfium (Google Chrome),... If your browser disappears when using an open parameter, you may have hit a bug in the browser or the viewer plug-in that causes the browser to crash. iTextSharp nor iText can crash a browser ;-)
There are no other ways you can navigate a PDF from an external application. The only thing you can do, is to add JavaScript to the PDF so that it always opens at the same page. This is done using an open action. I don't think this solves your problem as it would mean that you have to change the PDF file every time you want it to open at a different page.
I'm trying to send a PDF file from a WCF to silverlight client. PDF is generated by DevExpress XtraReports (in method XtraReport CreateReport(string reportTypeName, RootGenericReportParameterContainer reportInformation)).
Acually PDF is saved somewhere on clients computer after choosing save path in file save dialog - DevExpress takes care of everything - but I don't have a clue how to open the PDF in new tab in browser.
And here is another problem. Silverlight 4 has no access to local file system right? So information about local PDF location is useless. Maybe it would be better to save the PDF in WCF and send a link to it to the client - but how?
I would first question why you need to send the file to the Silverlight client. Get rid of that requirement and the solution becomes much simpler. Silverlight can provide a link that opens a new browser tab. That link would be handled by the web domain, processing it as an HttpHandler, generating the PDF file for the browser. Your PDF url doesn't have to reference a physical file, you can still generate it on request, handle querystring values, etc... Lots of different ways to do this.
Seems that the question isn't really about DevExpress or Silverlight - you're just looking to open a [document of some kind] in a new tab. Each browser natively handles things differently, and users can change tab handling to whatever they want. And (as you mentioned) once the user has downloaded the file, you no longer control it.
Your best bet (and the way I do it) is probably to have a link pointing to a handler/file using "target='_blank' " in the anchor tag on the webpage. From the server side, you would want to set the "Content-Disposition" header to "Inline" to indicate to the browser that the document should be displayed in place instead of downloaded ("Attachment").
Any tips/tricks on how to read a file from the local system dynamically in silverlight 4 without having to be out of browser?
Impersonation? Toggling app elevated trust on/off programmatically?
Or is this simply impossible to do without being out of browser?
As it stands I have a Pegasus ImageGear PDF viewer that I feed a "LoadDocument" method a stream of a PDF file.
This of course works fine if the file is an application resource and compiled with the application.
StreamResourceInfo resource = Application.GetResourceStream(new Uri("/TestRIA;component/SampleData/test.pdf", UriKind.Relative));
docViewer.LoadDocument(resource.Stream);
This silverlight application will be hosted through a website deployed on a server. This server has a partition specifically for repositories of files. These files in the "D:" partition are currently accessed by an ASPX web application and displayed in a PDF viewer. We're moving to silverlight, so as the user selects the grid row representation of that file in the repository, I know the "NAME" of the file. The repository's location is a string held in the database configured in another application. I simply concatenate the file name to that repository path and have the filepath.
Again, the 3rd party viewer's "LoadDocument" method has two overloads. One that accepts a stream of the PDF and one that accepts the filename of the PDF.
For example I have a click event that feeds the name of the document, and I already have the root path to concatenate it to:
void testButton_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
string docName = myListBox.SelectedItem.Content.ToString();
docViewer.LoadDocument(repositoryPath + docName);
//OR using stream
Stream s = new FileStream(repositoryPath + docName, FileMode.Open);
docViewer.LoadDocument(s);
}
You cannot programatically interact with an arbitrary file in SL4. Period. There's your section of isolated storage you can read from and write to files, but that isn't what you're looking for. You can read and write files through the file open dialog, but again I think that's not what you want.
The only way out of the Silverlight sandbox is the network. You have to have to talk to a non-sandboxed service to do this. SL has OK support for Web Services, Http, and even sockets. This seems doable for you since you're talking about the file being somewhere on a "server".
I remember reading that this will work without elevated trust only if the code is initiated with a user action such as button click.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff382752%28v=vs.95%29.aspx
For security purposes, if a Silverlight application is a sandboxed
application, file and print dialog boxes must be user-initiated. This
means you must show them from a user-initiated action, such as the
click event handler for a button.
As a possible workaround, if your Silverlight app is backed by a service, you could make the reading/writing of the file be handled by the service, assuming it has access to the location(s) and sufficient rights in the destination folder(s).
Create an OpenFileDialog box and you can return stream(s) to the selected file(s).
I have a Button (or a hyperlinkbutton) in Silverlight. I want to open a file on a server share when this butto in clicked. With other words I want a new Browser Tab or Window to open showing the requested file, just like I enter the URL in the browsers addressbar:
file://C:\myfile.txt
I tried in the OnClick Method the following:
System.Windows.Browser.HtmlPage.Window.Navigate(new Uri(#"file://C:\myfile.txt"),"_blank");
it throws an Exception (Access denied).
When I do the same with an http: page it works:
System.Windows.Browser.HtmlPage.Window.Navigate(new Uri(#"http://www.somedomain.com"),"_blank");
How can I achive the same with a file. Security can not be an issue, I have full access to that file. And please don't tell me that this is not possible... would mean we have to go back to PHP.
Silverlight runs on the client side and in by default in LOW trusted mode which dont allow application to access local file system.
For the purpose, u can try giving full trust to the silverlight application.
Firefox does not allow external URLs to link to a local resource anymore :(
I want to store a image in to a folder which I have selected from a list in silverlight
In Silverlight you have only limited access to the file system for security reason.
So everything what you want to save would end up in IsolatedStorage...
Check out this Quickstart Video and let me know if it helps
http://www.silverlight.net/learn/quickstarts/isolatedstorage/
In Silverlight, You have limited access to the client file system. If you are running Out Of Browser application with elevated permission, you can access User folders (My documents in windows).
But you can try some workarounds like using JavaScript u can try to download file. For reference Download a picture OnClick