Westwind.Web.MarkdownControl

*** DEPRECATED*** - please switch to `Westwind.Web.Markdown`.


Keywords
Markdown, WebForms, WebControl, Markdown-Parser, Westwind, aspnet, aspnet-mvc-5, csharp
Install
Install-Package Westwind.Web.MarkdownControl -Version 0.2.6

Documentation

Westwind.Web.Markdown

Markdown Support for your System.Web based ASP.NET WebForms and MVC applications

Get it from NuGet

To use the control you can install from Nuget:

PS> install-package Westwind.Web.Markdown

Features

This library provides:

  • Markdown Parser Functions
    Simple Markdown Parsing with Markdown.Parse() and Markdown.ParseHtml() methods you can use in code or in your MVC or WebForms markup.

  • Markdown WebForms Control for 'Markdown Islands'
    A useful <ww:markdown> server WebControl for easily embedding static Markdown text, Markdown from a file or data-bound Markdown into a document. Great for using Markdown for static content inside of larger Web Pages including the ability to load content from file.

  • Serve Markdown Pages from Disk using MarkdownHttpHandler
    This Http handler allows you to drop Markdown files into a site and serve those Markdown files as HTML rendered into a configurable template. The template's job is to provide the site chrome around the HTML so this can simply be a small content page pointing a Master Page in WebForms or Layout Page in MVC. A model object is passed via the Items collection.

  • Uses the the awesome Markdig Parser
    This library relies on the Markdig Markdown Parser and provides access to all Markdown Pipeline configuration options of that parser via a configuration hook.

  • Optional Html Script Sanitation
    Both the parsers and Web Control have options to sanitize HTML to avoid common XSS attacks.

Static Markdown Parsing Functions

For direct Markdown parsing you can use this library for rendering Markdown to HTML as strings or HtmlString values for MVC.

string html = Markdown.Parse("This is **bold Markdown**.");

or

<%= Markdown.Parse("This is **bold Markdown**.") %>

or even this in WebPages or MVC:

@Markdown.ParseHtml("This is **bold Markdown**.")

There are also a couple of file based methods that parse Markdown from files:

<%= Markdown.ParseHtmlFromFile("~/HomePageMainContent.md") %>

or in MVC:

@Markdown.ParseHtmlStringFromFile("~/HomePageMainContent.md")

Markdown Control

The Web Control provides you the abililty to easily embed static Markdown text into any Web Forms page.

<ww:Markdown runat="server" id="md1">
    ### 1.6.2
    *September 10th, 2017*
    
    * **Keyboard support for Context Menu**  
    You can now pop up the context menu via keyboard using the Windows context menu key (or equivalent). The menu is now cursor navigable. This brings spell checking and various edit operations to keyboard only use.
    
    * **Fix: `UseSingleWindow=false` no longer opens Remembered Documents**   
    When not running in `UseSingleWindow` mode, the `RememberLastDocumentsLength` setting has no effect and no previous windows are re-opened. This is so multiple open windows won't open the same documents all the time. In `UseSingleWindow` mode last documents are remembered and opened when starting MM for the first time.
</ww:Markdown>

And the content will be rendered to HTML at runtime.

Control Usage and Syntax

To use the control add it to your page like any other server control.

First add a reference to the control assembly either on the page or in Web.config:

At the top of the page:

<%@ Register TagPrefix="ww" Namespace="Westwind.Web.Markdown" Assembly="Westwind.Web.Markdown" %>

or in web.config globally:

<configuration>
    <system.web>
        <pages>
            <controls>
                <add assembly="Westwind.Web.Markdown" 
                     namespace="Westwind.Web.Markdown" 
                     tagPrefix="ww" />
            </controls>
        </pages>
    </system.web>
</configuration

Then embed the control into the page where you want the markdown to appear:

<ww:Markdown runat="server" id="md2" 
             NormalizeWhiteSpace="True"
             Filename=""
             SanitizeHtml="True">
    # Markdown Monster Change Log 
    [download latest version](https://markdownmonster.west-wind.com/download.aspx) &bull; 
    [install from Chocolatey](https://chocolatey.org/packages/MarkdownMonster) &bull; 
    [Web Site](https://markdownmonster.west-wind.com)
</ww:Markdown>

NormalizeWhiteSpace

This property is true by default and if the control starts with a line that is indented it will strip the same indentation from all lines following. This allows text like this to render properly as Markdown:

<div class="container">
    <ww:Markdown runat="server" id="md1">
        ### 1.6.2
        *September 10th, 2017*
        
        * **Keyboard support for Context Menu**  
        You can now pop up the context menu via keyboard using the Windows context menu key (or equivalent). The menu is now cursor navigable. This brings spell checking and various edit operations to keyboard only use.
        
        * **Fix: `UseSingleWindow=false` no longer opens Remembered Documents**   
        When not running in `UseSingleWindow` mode, the `RememberLastDocumentsLength` setting has no effect and no previous windows are re-opened. This is so multiple open windows won't open the same documents all the time. In `UseSingleWindow` mode last documents are remembered and opened when starting MM for the first time.
    </ww:Markdown>
</div>

Notice the indentation of the markdown. With NormalizeWhiteSpace off you need to explicitly left align the embedded Markdown Content:

<ww:Markdown runat="server" id="md2" NormalizeWhiteSpace="False">
# Markdown Monster Change Log 
[download latest version](https://markdownmonster.west-wind.com/download.aspx) &bull; 
[install from Chocolatey](https://chocolatey.org/packages/MarkdownMonster) &bull; 
[Web Site](https://markdownmonster.west-wind.com)
</ww:Markdown>

If not normalized the entire markdown block would render as code (more than 4 white space characters which is a code block). When NormalizeWhiteSpace is true the leading space is stripped of the entire block.

First Line Determines Whitespace to strip

The first line of the Markdown block determines what white space is stripped from all other lines.

Note the default is True - if you have funky behavior due to indentation I'd recommend you left justify your markdown and set this value to False.

SanitizeHtml

Markdown is essentially a superset of HTML as you can embed any HTML into Markdown. Markdown itself doesn't have any rules about what HTML can be embedded and it's entirely possible to embed script code inside of markdown.

If you capture Markdown text from users it's important you treat input Markdown just as you would raw HTML user input.

To help with this, the Markdown control has a SanitizeHtml property which is set to True by default, which performs rudimentary script sanitation. It removes <script>, <iframe>, <form> and a few other elements, removes javascript: and data: attribute content, and removes onXXX event handlers from HTML input.

If you rather render your Markdown as is set SantizeHtml to False. To see what that looks like you can try the following in your Markdown block:

<markdown runat="server" id="mm1" 
          SanitizeHtml="False">
	
	### Links:
	[Please don't hurt me](javascript:alert('clicked!');)
	
	### Script Blocks
	<script>alert('this will show!');</script>
	
	<div onmouseover="alert('That really hurts!')"
	     style="opacity: 0; padding: 20px;">
		A hidden menace in Venice
	</div>
</markdown>

Both Markdown.Parse() and Markdown.ParseHtml() also have a sanitizeHtml parameter that is true by default.

If you render static text you control then SanitizeHtml=False is usually Ok, but if you take user input and put into the browser to display, always use SanitizeHtml=True.

Filename

You can optionally provide a file name in lieu of text content in the Markdown control body. Files can be specified as virtual paths:

<ww:Markdown  Filename="~/EmbeddedMarkdown.md"></ww:Markdown>

The file name is resolved and loaded from disk, converted into Markdown and rendered into the page.

The file name is fed to Server.MapPath() so any path that is valid for MapPath() will work, but for portability I recommend you either use a page relative path or a virtual path as shown above.

Related Resources are Host Page relative

Please not that resources linked in the Markdown document - images mostly - are host page relative, not relative to the Markdown file. In most cases it'll be best to place referenced Markdown documents in the same folder as the host page to ensure that relative links work consistently.

Static Markdown Rendering

The control also includes static Markdown rendering that you can use in your Web Application inside of pages or your Web code.

string html = Markdown.Parse("This is **bold Markdown**");

You can also embed Markdown into pages like this:

<div class="container" id="ChangeLogText">
    <%= Markdown.Parse(Model.ChangelogMarkdownText) %>
</div>    

or in WebPages or MVC:

<div class="well well-sm">
    @Markdown.ParseHtml("This is **bold Markdown**.")
</div>

sanitizeHtml Parameter

By default the Parse method applies HTML sanitation via a sanitzeHtml parameter, which defaults to true. If you would like to get the raw unsanitized HTML returned or you want to do your own HTML Sanitation post parsing, set sanitizeHtml: false in the method call.

For code you know is safe:

string html = Markdown.Parse(staticMarkdown,sanitizeHtml: false);

For user input that you echo back to the screen:

// true is the default but it's good to be explicit!
string html = Markdown.Parse(staticMarkdown, sanitizeHtml: true);

Important

Always treat user entered Markdown as you would raw HTML!

Markdown Page Handler

The Markdown HTTP Handler allows you to simply drop Markdown files into an ASP.NET Web site and get those pages served as HTML. You can provide a template to provide the site's chrome around the rendered and access a 'model' that contains the title, the rendered Markdown, original Markdown and a few other things to render into your template. The 'template' is simply an endpoint in your System.Web based application, so it can point at either a WebForms Page or an MVC Controller/View Endpoint.

Setting up the Markdown Page Handler

To set up the handler you need to:

  • Add a reference to Westwind.Web.Markdown Nuget package
  • Add a Handler mapping of .md to MarkdownHttpHandler
  • Set up a 'template' HTML page or Controller/View
  • Use `Context.Items[MarkdownHttpHandler.ItemKey] to retrieve the model
  • Embed Model.RenderedMarkdownHtml into the template
  • Drop some .md files anywhere in your site

Add an HttpHandler Mapping

In order for IIS and ASP.NET to process .md (or whatever other extensions you choose) files, the extension has to be registered in web.config.

<configuration>
  <system.webServer>
    <handlers>      
      <add name=".md extension" 
           path="*.md" verb="GET" 
           type="Westwind.Web.Markdown.MarkdownHttpHandler,Westwind.Web.Markdown" 
           preCondition="integratedMode" />
    </handlers>
  </system.webServer>
</configuration>

Configuration

You can optionally configure the handler's operation using the static configuration object provided as MarkdownHttpHandler.Configuration. Preferrably you'll want to set this configuration once during application startup in Application_Start():

void Application_Start(object sender, EventArgs e) 
{
	MarkdownHttpHandler.Configuration.SanitizeHtml = true;
	MarkdownHttpHandler.Configuration.MarkdownTemplatePagePath = "~/_MarkdownPage.aspx";
}

Both of these values are shown as default above so unless you need to change those values you don't have to set them. The important one is the virtual path to the template that will actually render the Markdown content as a full HTML document. This can be any valid page in your System.Web based Web site that can access the Context.Items collection which is needed to retrieve the model data.

Create a Template

Next you'll need a template into which the markdown content can be rendered. Remember Markdown is just an HTML Fragment not a full document, so Markdown always needs a host document. Most likely you'll also want to make sure the document renders consistently using your Web site's consistent site chrome.

You can use either WebForms or MVC to do this - just pick an WebForms page or MVC view as an endpoint and then access the following model data in your HTML markdown or codebehind/controller:

var model = Context.Items[MarkdownHttpHandler.ModelKey] as MarkdownModel;

The model's properties available look like this:

Property Value
Title The title of the page from first # header or YAML
RenderedMarkdown An HtmlString value that contains the rendered Markdown
RawMarkdown Holds the raw, original Markdown text
YamlHeader Hold the YAML header if one is provided
RelativePath The relative virtual path of the original Markdown File
PhysicalPath The physical path of the original Markdown File requested

Most likely the only values you'll be interested in are RenderedMarkdown and the Title. You'll want to use the title for the title in the <head> of the page at least, and perhaps also in some sort of non-content page header.

Here's what the simplest possible templates look like for Web Forms and MVC:

WebForms

<%@ Page Language="C#" AutoEventWireup="true" MasterPageFile="~/MasterPage.master"  %>
<%@ Import Namespace="Westwind.Web.Markdown" %>

<asp:Content runat="server" ContentPlaceHolderID="MainContent">
    <%
        var model = Context.Items[MarkdownHttpHandler.ModelKey] as MarkdownModel;
    %>
    <div class="container">                
        <%= model.RenderedMarkdown %>
    </div>
</asp:Content>   

MVC

For MVC you'll want to change the path to point a view/controller of your choice in the configuration in Application_Start():

// this will be an internally redirected URL only
MarkdownHttpHandler.Configuration.MarkdownTemplatePagePath = "~/system/markdownhandling";

Then you can have a controller method (or just code in a view):

public ActionResult MarkdownHandling()
{
	var model = Context.Items[MarkdownHttpHandler.ModelKey] as MarkdownModel;
	return View(model);
}

Then inside of the Razor view you can utilize the model as needed:

@model MarkdownModel

<div class="container">
	<div class="page-header">
		@model.Title
	</div>

	<div class="page-content">
		@model.RenderedMarkdown
	</div>
</div>

If you need to pass other items into the view like authentication or login data required in your site chrome, you can just create a custom view that includes theMarkdownModel data. I left this in raw form from the Context.Items collection to allow this to work in just about any System.Web based solution.

Templates most likely will be very simple and only embed the content and title. All the rest of the page chrome is likely to be picked up by Master or Layout pages.

Dropping Files into your Site

At this point you can just drop .md files into your site. The files should be routed to the MarkdownHttpHandler which in turn renders the Markdown to HTML and calls your template with the Context.Items item that contains the model, which is then rendered by your customized template.

This is great to add some documentation or other text heavy content to your site.

Customizing the Markdown Pipeline

This parser uses the MarkDig Markdown parser which supports creating a custom pipeline. By default the parser is configured with most add-on features enabled. if you want to explicitly customize this list - either to minimize for performance, or for additional features you can override the static MarkdownParserMarkdig.OnCreateMarkdigPipeline function during application startup.

When this Func<bool,MarkdigPipeline> is set, this function is called instead of the default pipeline build logic.

Call this during application startup since the parser gets cached after first access. A good place as part of Application_Init processing:

void Application_Start(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    // OPTIONAL - override parser pipeline addins
    MarkdownParserMarkdig.OnCreateMarkdigPipeline = (usePragmaLines) =>
    {
        var builder = new Markdig.MarkdownPipelineBuilder()
            .UseEmphasisExtras()                
            .UsePipeTables()
            .UseGridTables()
            .UseAutoLinks() // URLs are parsed into anchors
            .UseAutoIdentifiers(AutoIdentifierOptions.GitHub)                
            .UseYamlFrontMatter()
            .UseEmojiAndSmiley(true);

        if (usePragmaLines)
            builder = builder.UsePragmaLines();

        return builder;
    };

}

Note that the parser is cached so if you change this value anywhere but in startup code, you can explicitly force the parser to refresh with:

Markdown.Parse("ok",forceReload: true);

Adding Code Highlighting

If you'd like to highlight your code snippets with syntax highlighting I recommend Highlight.js. Using this easy to use library you can add the following to a page to get syntax coloring for code snippets:

<link rel="stylesheet" href="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/highlight.js/9.12.0/styles/dracula.min.css" />
<script src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/highlight.js/9.12.0/highlight.min.js"></script>

<script>
    function highlightCode() {
        var pres = document.querySelectorAll("pre>code");
        for (var i = 0; i < pres.length; i++) {
            hljs.highlightBlock(pres[i]);
        }
    }
    highlightCode();
</script>

License

The Westwind.Web.MarkdownControl library is an open source product licensed under:

All source code is © West Wind Technologies, regardless of changes made to them. Any source code modifications must leave the original copyright code headers intact if present.

There's no charge to use, integrate or modify the code for this project. You are free to use it in personal, commercial, government and any other type of application and you are free to modify the code for use in your own projects.

Give back

If you find this library useful, consider making a small donation:

Acknowledgements

This library uses the following excellent components:


content created and published with Markdown Monster