SPSite class
Represents a collection of sites in a Web application, including a top-level Web site and all its subsites. Each SPSite object, or site collection, is represented within an SPSiteCollection object that consists of the collection of all site collections in the Web application.
Inheritance hierarchy
System.Object
Microsoft.SharePoint.SPSite
Namespace: Microsoft.SharePoint
Assembly: Microsoft.SharePoint (in Microsoft.SharePoint.dll)
Syntax
'Declaration
Public Class SPSite _
Implements IDisposable
'Usage
Dim instance As SPSite
public class SPSite : IDisposable
Remarks
To instantiate an SPSite object for a specific site collection on an ASP.NET page, or for a specific site collection within a console application, use the SPSite constructor as follows:
Dim oSiteCollection As New SPSite("Absolute_URL")
SPSite oSiteCollection = new SPSite("Absolute_URL");
Within an ASP.NET application, you can use the Site property of the SPContext class to return an SPSite object that represents the current site collection, as follows:
Dim oSiteCollection As SPSite = SPContext.Current.Site
SPSite oSiteCollection = SPContext.Current.Site;
Use the Sites property of the SPWebApplication class to return an SPSiteCollection object that represents the collection of site collections in a SharePoint Web application. Use an indexer to return a single site collection from the collection. For example, if the collection of site collections is assigned to a variable named oSiteCollections, use oSiteCollections[index] in C#, or oSiteCollections(index) in Visual Basic, where index is either the display name or the index number of the site collection in the collection.
Certain objects implement the IDisposable interface, and you must avoid retaining these objects in memory after they are no longer needed. If you create your own SPSite object, you can use the Dispose method to close the object. You can also instead implement a using statement so that the .NET Framework common language runtime (CLR) automatically releases the memory that is used to store the site collection as follows:
Using oSiteCollection = New SPSite("Absolute_URL")
...
End Using
using (SPSite oSiteCollection = new SPSite("Absolute_URL")
{
...
}
However, if you have a reference to a shared resource, such as when the object is provided by the GetContextSite method in a Web Part, do not use either method to close the object. Using either method on a shared resource causes an Access Violation error to occur. In scenarios where you have a reference to a shared resource, instead let Microsoft SharePoint Foundation or your portal application manage the object.
For more information about good coding practices, see Disposing Objects.
Important
If you install Infrastructure Update for Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 (KB951695), custom solutions may fail if they call the SharePoint object model while impersonation is suspended. If you use Windows authentication and your code calls the SharePoint object model from an Internet Information Services (IIS) worker process, the request must impersonate the calling user’s identity. SharePoint Foundation configures ASP.NET to impersonate the calling user automatically, but your code may unexpectedly fail if you suspend impersonation--for example, by calling the RevertToSelf function of the Windows API, or by calling the System.Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity.Impersonate method and passing IntPtr.Zero as the value of the user token parameter. Even if your code does not explicitly revert to self, it might be called by ASP.NET after it reverts to self, such as happens when implementing a virtual path provider. If your code does not impersonate the calling user, it might not function properly.
Thread safety
Any public static (Shared in Visual Basic) members of this type are thread safe. Any instance members are not guaranteed to be thread safe.