Can I redirect .NET method calls to a new method at runtime?
Suppose I have the following .NET classes:
public class C
{
public void M()
{
....
}
}
and
public class D
{
public void N()
{
....
}
}
These 2 classes reside in different namespaces, in different assemblies. Is there a way to cause all call to C.M()
to 'redirect' automatically to D.N()
? So, the calling method things its invoking C.M
, but in reality, D.N
is what actually gets called, with any parameters that C.M
would have taken. It doesn't matter if this happens for all instantiations of the class, or just for one specific object.
MS Research has the Detours Library that can do something very similar for normal 开发者_如何学编程Win32 DLL exports. I'm looking for a way to do this with a .NET method.
Microsoft has created a managed equivalent to Detours called Moles. The only thing I'm not sure of is the licensing; it is intended for testing (as part of Pex).
Dependency injection requires modifying the source; PostSharp requires modifying the binary; but Moles can be done dynamically at runtime.
Update: Moles was moved into Visual Studio itself; it is available in the Enterprise edition and is now called Microsoft Fakes.
There are mainly two possible approaches - proxying the objects or hooking the calls.
Proxying can be done using Castle Dynamic Proxy or any similar dynamic proxy framework. Hooking the calls can either be done with aspect oriented programming with something like PostSharp or even by black magic like done by Isolator (it is designed for unit testing but it can probably be (ab)used like all other technologies)
Try Dependency Injection?
Modify C to:
public class C
{
public void M()
{
if (Override != null) { Override.N(); }
else {
....
}
}
public D Override
}
If you need more flexibility, Extract Interface from class D.
I suspect you could do some IL weaving with PostSharp.
I did find this nice article on using other tools too : http://blog.andreloker.de/post/2009/02/14/Simple-AOP-call-interception-with-DynamicProxy.aspx
Yes you can
Please see this http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/463508/Net-CLR-Injection-Modify-IL-Codes-on-Run-time
You can do that by modifying the IL code on runtime
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