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

HXH
HXH
Apr 30, 2012
  1979
(0 votes)

EPiServer Workflow Replacement : Step 4–Rejecting Pages Programmatically

This is the fourth in a series of posts about how my company built a replacement workflow platform for EPiServer. Why we chose to do this is explained here: http://world.episerver.com/Blogs/Hans/Dates/2012/4/EPiServer-Workflow-Replacement--Step-1Explanation-and-Disabling-Edit-Tab/

I’ll go on record here and say that I don’t love that this is done through the database. This is why SDK’s are made..and this entire process should be able to be done by using the PageProviderBase.SetPageStatus method as described here : http://sdk.episerver.com/library/cms5/html/M_EPiServer_Core_PageProviderBase_SetPageStatus.htm

….. but, as I mentioned already, it doesn’t work – so we have to go right into the database. Any time you do this, make sure you know what you’re doing – there’s a good chance you’re mucking with something that isn’t meant to be touched. I take no responsibility for you using this, you’ve been warned*!

(*that being said, we’ve been using this in EPiServer CMS 5 for three years and EPiServer CMS 6 for several months, across different environments, and haven’t had any problems)

Here’s our RejectPage method. Basically, tblWorkPage seems to have all of the page status information – and all it really  needs is the WorkPageID (pkID) and the PageLinkID (fkPageID) values, and all we do is set ReadyToPublish back to 0, which in EPiServer terms basically means that the page is “Not Ready”.

 

        protected void RejectPage(PageData pageToReject)
        {
            SqlConnection SQLConnection = new SqlConnection();
            string UpdateString = "UPDATE tblWorkPage " +
                                "SET ReadyToPublish = 0 " +
                                "WHERE (pkID = " + pageToReject.WorkPageID + " ) " +
                                "AND (fkPageID = " + pageToReject.PageLink.ID + " )";

            String strConnString = ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["EPiServerDB"].ConnectionString;
            try
            {
                SQLConnection.ConnectionString = strConnString;
                SQLConnection.Open();
                SqlCommand mySqlCommand = SQLConnection.CreateCommand();
                mySqlCommand.CommandText = UpdateString;

                mySqlCommand.ExecuteNonQuery();

            }
            catch (Exception ex)
            {
                if (SQLConnection != null)
                    SQLConnection.Dispose();
                ErrorHandler.HandleError(ex);
            }
            finally
            {
                SQLConnection.Close();
            }

        }
 

We, of course, are an Oracle shop, so most of our instances are actually using the following variant instead:

      protected void RejectPageOracle(PageData pageToReject)
        {
            OracleConnection ORCLConnection = new OracleConnection(strConnString);

            string UpdateString = "UPDATE tblWorkPage SET " +
                            "ReadyToPublish = 0 " +
                            "WHERE pkID = " + pageToReject.WorkPageID +
                            "AND fkPageID = " + pageToReject.PageLink.ID;
            try
            {
                ORCLConnection.Open();
                OracleCommand oracleCommand = ORCLConnection.CreateCommand();
                oracleCommand.CommandText = UpdateString;
                oracleCommand.ExecuteNonQuery();
            }
            catch (Exception ex)
            {
                ORCLConnection.Close();
                ErrorHandler.HandleError(ex);
            }
            finally
            {
                ORCLConnection.Close();
            }
        }
 

…but you get the idea. In the next post I will discuss how we get around those pesky “Save and Publish” buttons which let people circumvent our new Workflow implementation.

Apr 30, 2012

Comments

Please login to comment.
Latest blogs
A day in the life of an Optimizely OMVP: Learning Optimizely Just Got Easier: Introducing the Optimizely Learning Centre

On the back of my last post about the Opti Graph Learning Centre, I am now happy to announce a revamped interactive learning platform that makes...

Graham Carr | Jan 31, 2026

Scheduled job for deleting content types and all related content

In my previous blog post which was about getting an overview of your sites content https://world.optimizely.com/blogs/Per-Nergard/Dates/2026/1/sche...

Per Nergård (MVP) | Jan 30, 2026

Working With Applications in Optimizely CMS 13

💡 Note:  The following content has been written based on Optimizely CMS 13 Preview 2 and may not accurately reflect the final release version. As...

Mark Stott | Jan 30, 2026

Experimentation at Speed Using Optimizely Opal and Web Experimentation

If you are working in experimentation, you will know that speed matters. The quicker you can go from idea to implementation, the faster you can...

Minesh Shah (Netcel) | Jan 30, 2026