Jan 16, 2011
  5386
(0 votes)

Chain of data fetching

I’m sure you are familiar with the EPiServer feature that allows a page to fetch data from another page. A webeditor can easily enable this feature in edit mode, and this works fine.

But what about a page that fetches data from a page that fetches data from another page? In this case we have a chain of 3 pages in inheritance. What does EPiServer do about this?

Let’s try:

  • Page A
    • Heading – “Base Page”
    • MainBody – “Base Page Body”
  • Page B
    • Heading – “Company Page”
    • MainBody – empty
    • Fetches data from Page A
  • Page C
    • Heading – “Department Page”
    • MainBody – empty
    • Fetches data from Page B

When showing Page B the MainBody propertys value will be “Base Page Body”. However, when showing Page C the MainBody property will be empty.

Let’s say you want to set up a site for a big company with subcompnaies and departments. 3 chains. And the top company want to distribute pages to the subcompanies with company guidelines that can be overridden. And, likewise, the subcompanies want to distribute those pages to the departments.

One way of getting this to work is to have chains of data-fetching. In our example, this means that Page C’s MainBody would not be empty when shown. It would have shown data from Page A.

The solution to this is to implement your own GetPropertyHandler. Using reflector, I fetched the code for EPiServer’s default property handler, and modified it:

 

namespace EPiServer.Custom.Handlers
{
    public class PropertyHandlers
    {
        public static PropertyData DefaultPropertyHandler(string name, PropertyDataCollection properties)
        {
            PropertyData data = properties.Get(name);
            if (data != null)
            {
                if (!data.IsNull || data.IsMetaData)
                {
                    return data;
                }

            }
            PropertyData data3 = FetchDataFrom(name, properties);
            if ((data3 != null) && (data3.Value != null))
            {
                return data3;
            }
            return (DynamicPropertyCache.DynamicPropertyFinder.FindDynamicProperty(name, properties) ?? data);
        }

        public static PropertyData FetchDataFrom(string name, PropertyDataCollection properties)
        {
            PropertyData data = properties.Get("PageShortcutType");
            if (((data == null) || (data.Value == null)) || (((PageShortcutType)data.Value) != PageShortcutType.FetchData))
            {
                return null;
            }
            data = properties.Get("PageShortcutLink");
            if (data == null)
            {
                return null;
            }
            PageReference pageLink = (PageReference)data.Value;
            if (!PageReference.IsValue(pageLink))
            {
                return null;
            }
            string languageBranch = properties.Get("PageLanguageBranch").Value as string;
            return GetPropertyFromPage(pageLink, languageBranch, name);
        }

        private static PropertyData GetPropertyFromPage(PageReference fetchPageLink, string languageBranch, string propertyName)
        {
            PageData page;
            if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(languageBranch))
            {
                page = DataFactory.Instance.GetPage(fetchPageLink);
            }
            else
            {
                page = DataFactory.Instance.GetPage(fetchPageLink, LanguageSelector.Fallback(languageBranch, true));
            }
            PropertyData data2 = page.Property.Get(propertyName);
            if (((data2 != null) && !data2.IsLanguageSpecific) && (data2.Value == null))
            {
                return DataFactory.Instance.GetPage(page.PageLink, LanguageSelector.MasterLanguage()).Property.Get(data2.Name);
            }
            if (string.Compare(propertyName, "MainBody", StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase) == 0)
            {
                var data3 = FetchDataFrom(propertyName, page.Property);
                if (data3 != null)
                {
                    return data3;
                }
            }
            return data2;
        }
     

    }
}

As you can see from the code, this fetch data logic is recursive as long as the property is named “MainBody”.

And then, you have hook up this handler in Global.asax Application_Start method:

        protected void Application_Start(Object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
            XFormControl.ControlSetup += new EventHandler(XForm_ControlSetup);
            PropertyDataCollection.GetHandler = EPiServer.Custom.Handlers.PropertyHandlers.DefaultPropertyHandler;
        }

I guess there are other ways of solving chains of inheritance, feedback is very welcome Smilefjes

Jan 16, 2011

Comments

bvskanth@gmail.com
bvskanth@gmail.com Jan 17, 2011 04:44 PM

Nice post :)

Please login to comment.
Latest blogs
Optimizely Opal: How to Build Effective Workflow Agents

If you're building workflow agents in Optimizely Opal, this post covers how specialized agents pass context to each other, why keeping agents small...

Andre | May 20, 2026

ReviewPR: An Azure Function That Reviews Your Azure DevOps Pull Requests With Claude

A while back I wrote about an  Azure Function App for PDF creation that we use to offload PDF rendering from our Optimizely DXP site. That same...

KennyG | May 19, 2026

Accelerating Optimizely CMS and Commerce upgrades with agentic AI (Part 2 of 2)

The Real Transformation in Optimizely CMS 13: Why the Upgrade Itself Is the Easy Part. A field-tested playbook for enterprise teams moving from...

Hung Le Hoang | May 18, 2026

Is the most powerful AI model really the best value?

Artificial Intelligence is already becoming part of everyday software development. Developers now use AI tools to generate code, write documentatio...

K Khan | May 16, 2026