A project for supporting API Endpoints in ASP.NET Core web applications.
If you like or are using this project to learn or start your solution, please give it a star. Thanks!
The fluent generics and base types involved in ApiEndpoints were updated in version 4.x, resulting in breaking changes. The updates required should be pretty straightforward, and have a few additional features that weren't supported in previous versions.
The two main changes introduced in v4 are:
- Base classes should now use
EndpointBaseSync
orEndpointBaseAsync
WithResponse
has been modified toWithResult
orWithActionResult
The result of an endpoint corresponds to the return type from the Handle
method. Since ASP.NET Core MVC refers to these as some variation of ActionResult, that's the term we are using in this package now as well. The Response your endpoint may return refers to any data/DTO that is being sent to the client as part of the Result. If you wish to preserve your existing v3 functionality that specified WithResponse<T>
you should be able to replace all such occurrences with WithActionResult<T>
. However, if you need to specify a different kind of Result, such as a FileResult
, you can now use something like WithResult<FileResult>
to achieve this.
An endpoint that previously inherited from the synchronous BaseEndpoint
should now inherit from EndpointBaseSync
. Additionally, the WithResponse
option now has optional non-generic versions, but if you were intending to return an ActionResult<T>
you would now use WithActionResult<T>
in your class definition, like so:
- public class ForecastEndpoint : BaseEndpoint
- .WithRequest<ForecastRequestDto>
- .WithResponse<IEnumerable<WeatherForecast>>
+ public class ForecastEndpoint : EndpointBaseSync
+ .WithRequest<ForecastRequestDto>
+ .WithActionResult<IEnumerable<WeatherForecast>>
The above change typically would not require any change to the Handle
method. Endpoints that inherited from BaseAsyncEndpoint
would now use EndpointBaseAsync
. You can also just inherit from EndpointBase
directly (without the .With*
additions) which will provide you with a controller with a single Handle method without restrictions on parameter amount and type, if you need more flexibility than the fluent generic interface provides.
For version 3.0 we implemented a new way to define the base classes using "fluent generics". You can watch a video of what you need to know to apply them to your site here.
2. Introducing ASP.NET Core API Endpoints
10. Projects Using ApiEndpoints
11. Success Stories and Testimonials
MVC Controllers are essentially an antipattern. They're dinosaurs. They are collections of methods that never call one another and rarely operate on the same state. They're not cohesive. They tend to become bloated and to grow out of control. Their private methods, if any, are usually only called by a single public method. Most developers recognize that controllers should be as small as possible (unscientific poll), but they're the only solution offered out of the box, so that's the tool 99% of ASP.NET Core developers use.
You can use tools like MediatR to mitigate the problem. You can read a detailed article about how to migrate from Controllers to Endpoints using MediatR. The short version is that MediatR enables you to have single-line action methods that route commands to handlers. This is objectively a better approach, resulting in more cohesive classes that better follow OO principles. But what if you didn't even need that extra plumbing?
That's what ASP.NET Core API Endpoints are all about.
The .NET team already did this exact thing with razor pages. They recognized that dealing with Views, ViewModels, Controllers, and Actions was way more complicated than necessary. It required a developer to jump around between at least 3 (and often more) different folders in order to add or modify a new page/view to their project. Razor pages addressed this by rethinking the model for page-based ASP.NET Core MVC endpoints.
Razor Pages group each page's razor markup, its related action(s), and its model into two linked files. It uses the same MVC features as the rest of the platform, so you still get routing, model binding, model validation, filters, the works. You literally give up nothing. But now when you need to add or modify a page you need to look at exactly 2 files, which are linked in the IDE so you don't need to scroll around the file system looking for them.
ASP.NET Core API Endpoints are essentially Razor Pages for APIs. They break apart bloated controllers and group the API models used by individual endpoints with the endpoint logic itself. They provide a simple way to have a single file for the logic and linked files for the model types.
When working with ASP.NET Core API Endpoints your project won't need any Controller classes. You can organize the Endpoints however you want. By feature. In a giant Endpoints folder. It doesn't matter - they'll work regardless of where you put them.
Most REST APIs have groups of endpoints for a given resource. In Controller-based projects you would have a controller per resource. When using API Endpoints you can simply create a folder per resource, just as you would use folders to group related pages in Razor Pages.
Instead of Model-View-Controller (MVC) the pattern becomes Request-EndPoint-Response(REPR). The REPR (reaper) pattern is much simpler and groups everything that has to do with a particular API endpoint together. It follows SOLID principles, in particular SRP and OCP. It also has all the benefits of feature folders and better follows the Common Closure Principle by grouping together things that change together.
I'll look to add detailed documentation in the future but for now here's all you need to get started (you can also check the sample project):
- Add the Ardalis.ApiEndpoints NuGet package to your ASP.NET Core web project.
- Create Endpoint classes by inheriting from either
EndpointBaseSync<TRequest,TResponse>
(for endpoints that accept a model as input) orEndpointBaseSync<TResponse>
(for endpoints that simply return a response). For example, a POST endpoint that creates a resource and then returns the newly created record would use the version that includes both a Request and a Response. A GET endpoint that just returns a list of records and doesn't accept any arguments would use the second version. - Implement the base class's abstract
Handle()
method. - Make sure to add a
[HttpGet]
or similar attribute to yourHandle()
method, specifying its route. - Define your
TResponse
type in a file in the same folder as its corresponding endpoint (or in the same file if you prefer). - Define your
TRequest
type (if any) just like theTResponse
class. - Test your ASP.NET Core API Endpoint. If you're using Swagger/OpenAPI it should just work with it automatically.
In a standard Web API controller, methods in the same class are grouped together in the Swagger UI. To add this same functionality for endpoints:
- Install the Swashbuckle.AspNetCore.Annotations
dotnet add package Swashbuckle.AspNetCore.Annotations
- Add EnableAnnotations to the Swagger configuration in Startup.cs
services.AddSwaggerGen(c => {
c.SwaggerDoc("v1", new OpenApiInfo { Title = "My API", Version = "v1" });
c.EnableAnnotations();
});
- Add the following attribute to endpoint methods
[HttpPost("/authors")]
[SwaggerOperation(
Summary = "Creates a new Author",
Description = "Creates a new Author",
OperationId = "Author_Create",
Tags = new[] { "AuthorEndpoint" })
]
public override async Task<ActionResult<CreateAuthorResult>> HandleAsync([FromBody]CreateAuthorCommand request)
{
var author = new Author();
_mapper.Map(request, author);
await _repository.AddAsync(author);
var result = _mapper.Map<CreateAuthorResult>(author);
return Ok(result);
}
Option to use service dependency injection instead of constructor
// File: sample/SampleEndpointApp/Endpoints/Authors/List.cs
public class List : BaseAsyncEndpoint
.WithRequest<AuthorListRequest>
.WithResponse<IList<AuthorListResult>>
{
private readonly IAsyncRepository<Author> repository;
private readonly IMapper mapper;
public List(
IAsyncRepository<Author> repository,
IMapper mapper)
{
this.repository = repository;
this.mapper = mapper;
}
[HttpGet("/authors")]
[SwaggerOperation(
Summary = "List all Authors",
Description = "List all Authors",
OperationId = "Author_List",
Tags = new[] { "AuthorEndpoint" })
]
public override async Task<ActionResult<IList<AuthorListResult>>> HandleAsync(
[FromQuery] AuthorListRequest request,
CancellationToken cancellationToken = default)
{
if (request.PerPage == 0)
{
request.PerPage = 10;
}
if (request.Page == 0)
{
request.Page = 1;
}
var result = (await repository.ListAllAsync(request.PerPage, request.Page, cancellationToken))
.Select(i => mapper.Map<AuthorListResult>(i));
return Ok(result);
}
}
Examples of the configuration can be found in the sample API project
Below are what I expect will be some common questions:
If you want to create a common route template for all or some subset of your Endpoints, simply create a EndpointBaseSync of your own that inherits from Ardalis.Api.Endpoints.EndpointBaseSync
and add a [Route]
attribute to it.
After refactoring to use the fluent generics pattern, there is no longer a way to use a base class for a default route. Instead, you should define your routes as constants which you can store in a central file or in each Request DTO (the sample shows this approach).
Technically, yes. But don't do that. If you really want that, you should just use a Controller.
To do this, you'll need to decorate the properties of your model with the proper route attributes:
public class NewArticleRequest
{
[FromRoute(Name = "username")] public string Username { get; set; }
[FromRoute(Name ="category")] public string Category { get; set; }
[FromBody] public Article Article { get; set; }
}
Then, it's very important to include [FromRoute]
in the method declaration in your endpoint using that model:
public override Task<ActionResult> HandleAsync([FromRoute] NewArticleRequest request)
Note the [Route("/article")]
and [HttpPost("{username}/{category}")]
lines below. These lines form the route string used in the NewArticleRequest
class above.
[Route("/article")]
public class Post : BaseAsyncEndpoint
.WithRequest<NewArticleRequest>
.WithoutResponse
{
[HttpPost("{username}/{category}")]
[SwaggerOperation(
Summary = "Submit a new article",
Description = "Enables the submission of new articles",
OperationId = "Article_Create",
Tags = new[] {"Article"})
]
public override Task<ActionResult> HandleAsync([FromRoute] NewArticleRequest request,
CancellationToken cancellationToken = new CancellationToken())
{
//// your implementation
}
}
For more information, take a look at this discussion and this issue. Thank you to @garywoodfine and @matt-lethargic.
There's an example in the sample app that shows how to set this up and return a File actionresult. For the base type, just use the WithoutResponse
option and in the endpoint handler return File()
.
How can I use model binding to pull values from multiple places, like [FromRoute]
, [FromBody]
, etc.?
#172 The base endpoints only expose a single model type which is used on the Handle method, so you can't easily add additional parameters to the Handle method. However, you can put as many properties on the associated Request DTO as you want, and model binding allows you to set the same attributes per property as you would have set per parameter on the action method. See Model Binding Docs and discussion here in issue 42
There's an example in the sample app that shows how to set this up and return an IAsyncEnumerable<T>
. For the base type, just use the WithAsyncEnumerableResult<T>
option and in the endpoint handler yeld return after awaiting your async code.
Note: streaming with IAsyncEnumerable does not work within Swagger Ui. Use curl to test this functionality
curl -X "GET" "https://localhost:44338/api/Authors/stream" -H "accept: text/plain"
The following are some things I'd like to add to the project/package.
Visual Studio and/or CLI item templates would make it much easier to create Endpoints and their associated models, with the correct naming so they're linked in the IDE.
One thing that Controllers do have is built-in support in the framework to use their name in routes (e.g. "[controller]/{id?}
"). Currently in the sample app routes are hard-coded strings. It would be nice if there were an easy way to use a convention based on foldername or namespace or something (using foldername would align with how Razor Pages routing works).
- Moving from Controllers and Actions to Endpoints
- Decoupling Controllers with ApiEndpoints
- Fluent Generics
- Clean up your .NET Controllers with API Endpoints by Nick Chapsas
- The .NET Docs Show - Controllers are Dinosaurs and the Case for API Endpoints
- .NET Rocks ASP.NET Core API Endpoints with Steve Smith
- SimpleEndpoints
- FunctionMonkey A similar approach for Azure Functions.
- https://github.com/Kahbazi/MediatR.AspNetCore.Endpoints A similar approach using MediatR and middleware.
- Voyager A similar approach using MediatR that works for ASP.NET core and Azure Functions.
If you're using them or find one not in this list, feel free to add it here via a pull request!
- CleanArchitecture: A solution template for ASP.NET 3.x solutions using Clean Architecture.
- PayrollProcessor: A smorgasbord of modern .NET tech written with functional and asynchronous patterns.
- eShopOnWeb: Sample ASP.NET Core reference application, powered by Microsoft
"I have implemented in my team your API endpoint solution and I must tell you that was a pretty good investment! in particular how maintainable and testable the solution became!"