Making Sense of the SharePoint World


A Free SharePoint Org Chart Web Part

Nov-112009

MCj04348220000[1]Enhancing a CodePlex Project

In this article, I'm going to get a bit more technical than is my normal wont. In fact, I'm going to go into Visual Studio, and show you some C# code as well.

(Waiting a few minutes for folks who know me to pick their jaws up off the floor, or even find some smelling salts... Yes, Virginia, I really can program when I have to. :) I just very rarely have to.)

That doesn't mean I'm going to be building this project from scratch. Far from it. So, if you're looking for info on how to build a .wsp solution package, this isn't the article for you. I am going to talk a bit about user choice, web part properties, a programming technique called "recursion", and the SharePoint API (in particular, accessing the User Profile store).

What I'm going to do is show you how to fulfill a very common business requirement by starting with a fairly simple CodePlex project, and tweaking it until it is something that does just what you need.

A Common Request

Virtually every client I've implemented SharePoint for has asked for an organizational chart. The problem is, there aren't very many org chart web parts out there for SharePoint, and those that are, tend to have issues (usually performance) - especially if you have a fairly large organization.

SharePoint Server 2010 finally makes a really cool organization chart part of the package. It is Silverlight based, and works pretty fast. Unfortunately, that's 2010, and it is going to be a while before many companies are ready to deploy it. We need something that will work for "today".

Finding the CodePlex Project

So what do you do? Well, a quick online search reveals that there is indeed an org chart part on CodePlex, called (quite originally) "OrgChartPart". This was written by Rodney Viana. Looking at the specs, it sounds promising:

  • It reads profile information from SharePoint
  • It uses a free JavaScript Org Chart rendering engine
  • And of course, it is free, too!

What's not to like?

There is a bit, as it turns out, but let's start with the good. Installing the OrgChartPart is a breeze. Download the .wsp file from CodePlex, install it with the "stsadm -o addsolution" command, and deploy it to your web application(s). You will then need to add the part to your web part gallery (there is a feature that does this, or you can do it manually), then add it to a page. (I suggest you add it to a web part page that has nothing else on it, for reasons you will see in a moment.) This takes 5 minutes, tops.

The web part reads your MOSS profile store, and emits the chart. Just like that, you're done!

On the surface, that doesn't sound too bad. But dig a little deeper, and you find a big red flag - the author warns that you shouldn't use the part if you have more than 500 profiles in your organization. Of course, if you have more than 500, you've got a problem.

But even if you have fewer than 500 profiles, you might not like the results. Consider the following clip of the chart initially rendered by this part:

image

This is a pretty complicated organization - it doesn't fit on the screen, and it is completely expanded by default. But, there's another issue. The chart looks a little "top heavy". That's because the Active Directory includes a number of accounts that aren't actually users, and therefore don't have associations in the hierarchy. Looking closer, you can see that Patricia Doyle, the CEO, has conference rooms as peers! There's also some clipping of titles and departments.

image

Note: This is technically a problem with the Active Directory and/or its import. In theory, you could set up the AD/Profile import to exclude non-person entities. But, that's another story... :)

Looking Under the Hood

Still, even with those issues, you can see the potential in this part.

Note: Most of the remainder of this article discusses how the OrgChartPart was originally implemented, and how I updated it. If you just want the end results, you can download the original source from CodePlex, plus my replacement OrgChartPart.cs file and rebuild the solution. (I have also given the code updates to Rodney, who may update the actual CodePlex project.)

Fortunately, as with most CodePlex projects, we have access to the source code. I downloaded the source and opened the project in Visual Studio. What we see is, the part is actually quite simple. There is one .cs file (the two in the image below include my edited version, plus the original) and the ECOTree JavaScript library. ECOTree is what actually does the heavy lifting of drawing the chart. By default, OrtChartPart uses just a fraction of the power of this library (follow the link above for more details).

image

There is also a "departmentconfig.xml" file hiding in the Layouts folder of the 12 hive. Hmmm...

Looking at the code itself, we find there are four main functional areas beyond the basics needed to render a web part:

  1. Handling that department file
  2. Crawling the profile store
  3. Building a profile render block
  4. Building the chart

Now, We Tweak

In the rest of this article, I'm going to look at each of the sections I described above, tell you how the original code worked, and show you what I did to update them. While I won't embed the entire source in the article, you can easily download it if you want to examine everything in context.

On the Department File

For now, I'm just going to say that while the idea of mapping the department information in the profile to department home pages is admirable, the way it was implemented was causing some serious performance issues, and would be a long-term maintenance headache. Therefore, I commented out the two lines that actually make use of it (249 and 267 in my updated file), and replaced the link rendering with a simple text rendering. Here are the original and replaced lines from the updated code ( 267, 268).

//this.department = config.Find(EmptyIfNull(Profile[PropertyConstants.Department]));
this.department = EmptyIfNull(Profile[PropertyConstants.Department]);

"config.Find" is part of a config object that is defined elsewhere in the code. For purposes of this article, though, we're just going to ignore it.

Crawling the Profile Store

The profile crawl itself takes place in a function called PopulateOrg(). Examining this routine, a few things stand out.

First, there are two different ways for nodes to be added to the chart. One uses information read from a user's profile, the other feeds static information into a node. (This is used primarily to display an error message, if needed.)

Second, the population routine reads the entire profile store in one fell swoop. Combined with the inefficiency of the department link mapping mentioned above, this is a big part of the performance limiting the part to organizations with 500 or fewer profiles.

Finally, hidden in this routine (but commented out) is a nice little set of sample data.

At its core, an organization is a hierarchy. A hierarchy is made of parents and children. Technically, as long as you know the parent of each node, you can manually construct the organization. This is the approach originally taken by this web part.

foreach (UserProfile pf in pmManager)
{
     Details dt = new Details();
     dt.AddProfile(pf, this.Page.Request);

     if (dt.TrimFullName != String.Empty)
         employeeList.Add(dt);

}

However, a UserProfile object itself has methods for listing its children and ancestors directly. This means that we can easily start at any point in the tree, and generate the organization descendent from it, as well as the chain of command above it.

The ancestors are represented in a single collection, called through the GetManagers() method. The first level of children are just as easily retrieved with the GetDirectReports() method. However, if we want more than one level of child, we would then need to call the GetDirectReports() method for each child returned in the previous call.

If you try doing this with loops, things can get complicated pretty quickly. However, there is a simple way to to handle an arbitrary number of child nodes, to an arbitrary depth. This is a technique called "recursion". Essentially, you create a function that calls itself. In order to keep it from running forever, one of the parameters that should be passed to a recursive function should be a "depth" limiter. Within the function, the child calls decrement this limiter, and stop calling when it reaches a threshold level. In my update, I create the recursive function addChildren(). This takes the starting profile, and the depth limiter as parameters.

protected void addChildren(UserProfile Parent, int levels)
{
    try
    {
        foreach (UserProfile pf in Parent.GetDirectReports())
        { 
           Details dt = new Details();
            dt.AddProfile(pf, this.Page.Request, false);

            if (dt.TrimFullName != String.Empty)
            {
                employeeList.Add(dt);
                if (levels > 0)
                    addChildren(pf, levels - 1);
            }
        }
    }
    catch (Exception ex)
    {
        AddInList("1", "", "Error", "", ex.Message); 
    }
}

Notice also that I have added a parameter to the AddProfile method of the details (dt) object. This third parameter allows me to force the profile being added to act as a root, or top-level, node. (This is used for the management chain of command.)

Giving Your Users Choices

Looking at the stuff I've described in the preceding section, there is something very different from the original implementation - instead of crawling the whole profile store, I crawl a specified subsection. That requires two pieces of input - the node I plan to start with, and how deep I want to crawl.

Fortunately, when you create SharePoint Web parts, you can easily allow the user to enter configuration information. In this case, I am actually going to give the user three options. The third will allow the user to show the sample data instead of the active directory. (Naturally, I uncommented the sample population section, and wrapped the two population methods in an if...else block.)

To add a property to a web part, you add some descriptive information to say how the property is to be displayed. You also set up a public property variable to appear in the configuration pane, and a private variable to use in your code. The private variable can include a default value. The public property includes a get and a set block. While these three properties simply take the value as given, you will see later that this isn't the only option.

[Personalizable(PersonalizationScope.Shared)]
[WebBrowsable(true)]
[System.ComponentModel.Category("Org Chart Settings")]
[WebDisplayName("StartProfile")]
[WebDescription("Enter the top user to display:")]
public string StartProfile
{
    get
    {
        return startProfile;
    }
    set { startProfile = value; }
}
private string startProfile;

[Personalizable(PersonalizationScope.Shared)]
[WebBrowsable(true)]
[System.ComponentModel.Category("Org Chart Settings")]
[WebDisplayName("ChartDepth")]
[WebDescription("Subordinate levels to display:")]
public int ChartDepth
{
    get
    {
        return chartDepth;
    }
    set { chartDepth = value; }
}
private int chartDepth = 1;

[Personalizable(PersonalizationScope.Shared)]
[WebBrowsable(true)]
[System.ComponentModel.Category("Org Chart Settings")]
[WebDisplayName("Show Sample Data")]
[WebDescription("Show sample data instead of profile info:")]
public bool ShowSample
{
    get
    {
        return showSample;
    }
    set { showSample = value; }
}
private bool showSample = true;

This is how the properties look in the Web part configuration pane. The "CacheTime" parameter was included in the original part (though it is unused in the code). I'll discuss the "Left To Right" parameter later.

image

You might also notice that I set the default value of showSample to true. This allows the user to place the web part on the page and see a reasonable representation of its function, without needing to first set the start point and depth.

image 

Note: The chart initially renders with only the first layer of children open. I expanded it for this screen shot.

Rendering a Profile

Each node on the chart is constructed of HTML. The HTML is assembled in the ReturnItem() function.

I wanted to enable two functions not already present - showing the user's profile picture, and allowing the user to "re-home" the chart on another node in order to enable navigation of the entire organization in convenient sections. This meant I needed to add two properties to the details object, and then add the code to display these properties appropriately in the chart.

In order to make the re-home function work, I added an override to the StartProfile. Essentially, if there is a rootuser query string parameter, the profile specified there will be used instead of the one set in the web part property. The SetRoot link calls the current page with rootuser set to the selected profile.

In addition to the actual HTML, however, the look of the node contents are controlled by styles defined in the ECOTree.css file. In order to allow the picture to render, as well as permitting the text to fit, I needed to modify the .econode class in this file as follows.

.econode {
    text-overflow: clip;
    font-family: Verdana, Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;
    font-size: xx-small;
        color: White;
    padding: 2px;
}

Rendering the Chart

Just as we built up a node by assembling the HTML, the chart itself is built by assembling JavaScript. One of the things I did was to examine the functions provided by the ECOTree library. I found that it offered a lot of flexibility that wasn't currently in use. I felt the most important was the ability to set the orientation. Here's where that "Left to Right" checkbox comes into play. The library uses a parameter .RO_TOP or RO_LEFT to decide whether the chart is top to bottom, or left to right.

This is the code that reads and sets that web part parameter:

[Personalizable(PersonalizationScope.Shared)]
[WebBrowsable(true)]
[System.ComponentModel.Category("Org Chart Settings")]
[WebDisplayName("Left To Right")]
[WebDescription("Root at left, otherwise at top:")]
public bool RootLeft
{
    get
    {
        if (chartOrient == "LEFT")
        {
            return true;
        }
        else
        {
            return false;
        }
    }
    set
    {
        if (value)
        {
            chartOrient = "LEFT";
        }
        else
        {
            chartOrient = "TOP";
        }
    }
}
private string chartOrient = "TOP";

This demonstrates the kind of things you can do with the get and set blocks of a parameter. The user gets to the see the checkbox that represents a binary choice, but the internal variable is a string, meaning that we can render the part simply appending the string value without inserting an "if" block.

myTree.config.iRootOrientation = ECOTree.RO_");
sb.Append(chartOrient);
sb.Append(@";

The Results

The image below shows you how the revised chart looks with the same profile store shown in the first image.

image

This is a much more manageable presentation. It allows the user to drill into the organization as needed, and since we set the starting node on our CEO, those conference rooms who don't report to anybody are nowhere to be found.

I hope this article has shown you how easy it is to stand upon the shoulders of giants when looking for features to add to SharePoint. I built upon the CodePlex OrgChartPart, which itself leveraged the ECOTree charting library.

There are many more things you could do with this web part. You could add options to select the color of the nodes, for example. Or give users a check-box to render the entire organization at once, as the original part did.

The options are limited only by your imagination!

 
Posted by Woody Windischman | 14 Comments | Trackback Url | Bookmark with:        
Tags: Customization, Data Integration, Design, Programming, SharePoint

Comments

Wednesday, 11 Nov 2009 12:39 by Jeremy Thake
Woody that's great that you've extended that project like that! AWESOME! I did a similar prototype in Silverlight but the client wouldn't let me put it up on CodePlex.

Wednesday, 11 Nov 2009 01:14 by Anand Chandawarkar
Excellent work ... indeed simple and accurate. Thanks for this wonderful article. Cheers, Anand

Thursday, 3 Dec 2009 07:37 by TheMan
Any Chance you can make a compiled version available for download?

Friday, 4 Dec 2009 06:25 by Woody
TM, It would be up to Rodney to rebuild the solution package on the CodePlex site. However, you can readily open the project in Visual Web Developer Express (free), replace the .cs file, and compile a new DLL to copy into the GAC once you have installed the original .wsp.

Monday, 14 Dec 2009 03:57 by Daniel
I currently did a rebuild on this solution as you suggested. I have it installed and am currently trying to get it to display the correct information. It displays the "Sample Data" fine but when I uncheck that option and try to put in a "StartProfile" I get an error in the webpart location inside one of those boxes that says the following: Error User Not Found: Could not load profile data from the database. Please help this looks like a great webpart and just what my company is in need of. Thansk in advance

Tuesday, 15 Dec 2009 06:41 by Woody
Hi Daniel, Was the original part able to read the profile store in your environment? In this update, the starting user parameter takes the ID in the form DOMAIN\User. Can you view that user's MySite profile? (Remember, this relies on MOSS MySites, not the WSS Site Collection profiles...)

Thursday, 21 Jan 2010 01:15 by Kittu
I built this solution modified a little bit but i still have an alignment issues if org chart expands more profiles it goes beyond the webpart boundary, it's not fitting well on the page, do you have any solution for this. pls help.

Friday, 22 Jan 2010 02:12 by Woody
Kittu, Unfortunately, I don't have a solution to that. In fact, that's one of the reasons I thought it was important to let you limit the depth of the chart and re-home it. The issue appears to be in the ECOTree library, rather than the web part itself, but I haven't dug much beyond that.

Monday, 8 Feb 2010 05:08 by Joe
Woody, that is a great addition. However I don't have the skills or the tools to update the original. Do you by any chance have a complete web part install? Thanks

Tuesday, 9 Feb 2010 06:34 by Woody
Hi Joe, I haven't personally rebuilt the WSP with these changes. For testing this, I actually installed the solution, then used Visual Web Developer Express to open the source and compile my changes. I just copied the new DLL into the GAC on my test server. (Not the recommended way of doing things in production, by the way...)

Saturday, 13 Feb 2010 01:08 by Sajid
Please provide me the link to download this webpart. Also can I have sharepoint List as its datasource?

Sunday, 21 Feb 2010 02:15 by Woody
Sajid, The links for the original CodePlex project, a source code file that includes my changes, and the Javascript library the project uses to draw the chart, are all in the article. As for using a SharePoint list as a source, you could make some changes to allow that fairly easily, but it isn't the way the current part is writtn. I would use a variation on reading the sample data, however, as SP Lists aren't hierarchical and don't have the parent/child calls that the profile store has.

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