A critical vulnerability was discovered in React Server Components (Next.js). Our systems remain protected but we advise to update packages to newest version. Learn More


May 20, 2009
  9152
(3 votes)

Adding a connected Company field to an EPiServer user – A love story

In the future posts about page provider I’ll add oil to the internal/private/coupled EPiServer classes fire started by Anders Hattestad. So before all that whining I wanted to share when implementing something in EPiServer is actually much smoother than I imagined. So suck up mode on!

Profile

What I want is to somehow connect a company name with an EPiServer user. My initial instinct was to use the asp.net functionality profiles (which EPiServer uses too to store for example the edit tree settings for a user) and then somehow enable the administrators of the site to administrate this on the regular user settings page.

So I looked at the profile section in web.config and it seems a Company setting was already in place for me to use:

<profile enabled="true" defaultProvider="SqlProfile" automaticSaveEnabled="true">
    <properties>
        <add name="Address" type="System.String" provider="SqlProfile"/>
        <add name="ZipCode" type="System.String" provider="SqlProfile"/>
        <add name="Locality" type="System.String" provider="SqlProfile"/>
        <add name="Email" type="System.String" provider="SqlProfile"/>
        <add name="FirstName" type="System.String" provider="SqlProfile"/>
        <add name="LastName" type="System.String" provider="SqlProfile"/>
        <add name="Language" type="System.String" provider="SqlProfile"/>
        <add name="Country" type="System.String" provider="SqlProfile"/>
        <add name="Company" type="System.String" provider="SqlProfile"/>
        <add name="Title" type="System.String" provider="SqlProfile"/>
        <add name="SubscriptionInfo" type="EPiServer.Personalization.SubscriptionInfo, EPiServer" provider="SqlProfile"/>
        <add name="CustomExplorerTreePanel" type="System.String" provider="SqlProfile"/>
        <add name="FileManagerFavourites" type="System.Collections.Generic.List`1[System.String]" provider="SqlProfile"/>
        <add name="EditTreeSettings" type="EPiServer.Personalization.GuiSettings, EPiServer" provider="SqlProfile"/>
        <add name="ClientToolsActivationKey" type="System.String" provider="SqlProfile"/>
        <add name="FrameworkName" type="System.String" provider="SqlProfile"/>
    </properties>
    <providers>
        <clear/>
        <add name="SqlProfile" type="System.Web.Profile.SqlProfileProvider, System.Web, Version=2.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a" connectionStringName="EPiServerDB" applicationName="EPiServerSample"/>
    </providers>
</profile>

Plugin control

To enable the end users to administrate this setting we’ll add a control to the area called SidSettingsArea (which is the user settings area). Then I implemented the interface IUserSettings which contains the two methods

public void LoadSettings(string userName, EPiServer.Personalization.EPiServerProfile data)
{
    
}
 
public void SaveSettings(string userName, EPiServer.Personalization.EPiServerProfile data)
{
 
}

So luckily enough for me the profile data of the user is sent to these two methods which makes it easy to implement the functionality we want. Since company is one of the “built in” (sort to speak) profile values it’s available strongly typed in the EPiServerProfile class. So I added a textbox to my control (called tbCompany) where the user entered the company and bang, everything just worked. This is the complete code for the control:

[GuiPlugIn(DisplayName = "User Settings", Description = "Additional settings for the user", Area = PlugInArea.SidSettingsArea, Url = "~/UI/PlugIns/UserSettings.ascx")]
    public partial class UserSettings : System.Web.UI.UserControl, IUserSettings, ICustomPlugInLoader
    {
        protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
 
        }
 
        #region IUserSettings Members
 
        public void LoadSettings(string userName, EPiServer.Personalization.EPiServerProfile data)
        {
            if(!IsPostBack)
            {
                tbCompany.Text = data.Company;
            }
            
        }
 
        private bool saveRequiresUIReload;
        public bool SaveRequiresUIReload
        {
            get
            {
                return saveRequiresUIReload;
            }
            set
            {
                saveRequiresUIReload = value;
            }
        }
 
        public void SaveSettings(string userName, EPiServer.Personalization.EPiServerProfile data)
        {
            data.Company = tbCompany.Text;
            data.Save();
        }
 
        #endregion
 
        #region ICustomPlugInLoader Members
 
        public PlugInDescriptor[] List()
        {
            return new PlugInDescriptor[] { PlugInDescriptor.Load(typeof(UserSettings)) };
        }
 
        #endregion
    }

user2

Accessing the data

To access the data on the site we use the class EPiServer.Personalization.EPiServerProfile. It contains a a static property called Current that’s mapped to the current users profile. So to access the company of the currently logged in user we’d simply write

EPiServer.Personalization.EPiServerProfile.Current.Company

If you add additional profile properties (that aren’t mapped in the EPiServerProfile class) you can access those bracket style (in the same manner as PageData)

EPiServer.Personalization.EPiServerProfile.Current["SomeProperty"]
May 20, 2009

Comments

Mark Stott
Mark Stott Aug 2, 2023 10:00 AM

Somewhat late to this article ... But this was just what I needed for a CMS 11 client.  Will be interesting to see if and how this is possible for CMS 12.

Please login to comment.
Latest blogs
Building simple Opal tools for product search and content creation

Optimizely Opal tools make it easy for AI agents to call your APIs – in this post we’ll build a small ASP.NET host that exposes two of them: one fo...

Pär Wissmark | Dec 13, 2025 |

CMS Audiences - check all usage

Sometimes you want to check if an Audience from your CMS (former Visitor Group) has been used by which page(and which version of that page) Then yo...

Tuan Anh Hoang | Dec 12, 2025

Data Imports in Optimizely: Part 2 - Query data efficiently

One of the more time consuming parts of an import is looking up data to update. Naively, it is possible to use the PageCriteriaQueryService to quer...

Matt FitzGerald-Chamberlain | Dec 11, 2025 |

Beginner's Guide for Optimizely Backend Developers

Developing with Optimizely (formerly Episerver) requires more than just technical know‑how. It’s about respecting the editor’s perspective, ensurin...

MilosR | Dec 10, 2025

Optimizely PaaS Administrator Certification : Free for Everyone

Optimizely has recently launched a free PaaS Administrator Certification. https://academy.optimizely.com/student/activity/2958208-paas-cms-administ...

Madhu | Dec 9, 2025 |

Fixing TinyMCE Initialization Failures in Optimizely CMS: A Hidden Pipeline Issue with .NET SDK Versions

Over the past few weeks, several Optimizely CMS projects began experiencing a puzzling failure: XHtmlString fields stopped initializing TinyMCE in...

Francisco Quintanilla | Dec 9, 2025 |