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I was working on some code today when I had a bit of an unusual problem. I had a SearchServiceApplicationProxy and I wanted to find out all of the web applications that were using it. There were a few different routes I could take, most of them which would require churning through some number of collections in a way I usually hate. I decided instead to use LINQ to write a query to find the web apps and it actually worked the first time (a minor miracle in my world). So here's the code that I used; especially in SharePoint 2010 with so many collections of things all over the place, and this thing has some relationship to that thing, I find I'm using LINQ a lot more when writing code.
//get my service app proxy
SearchServiceApplicationProxy p = myCodeThatGetsTheServiceAppProxy();
//get a reference to the web service to snag the list of web apps from
SPWebService ws = SPWebService.ContentService;
//write a LINQ query to get all the web applications that use
//this service application proxy
var waps = from SPWebApplication wp in ws.WebApplications
where wp.ServiceApplicationProxyGroup.Proxies.Contains((SPServiceApplicationProxy)p)
select wp;
//do something with the results
foreach (SPWebApplication wap in waps)
{
//do something with the results
}
Comments
- Anonymous
January 01, 2003
The comment has been removed