Simple RESTful API built with ASP.NET Core 3.1 to show how to create RESTful services using a decoupled, maintainable architecture.
Some changes were made to the code presented at the tutorial published on Medium and freeCodeCamp, to make the API code cleaner and to add functionalities that developers may find useful.
If you want to download the original code showed on the tutorial, download the 1.0.0 tag.
-
1.3.0 [December 15, 2019]
- Updated ASP.NET Core version to 3.1, fixed issues related to InMemoryProvider, updated Swagger (see #5);
- Fixed paging calculation mistake, updated descriptions, updated "launchSettings.json" to open Swagger on running the application.
-
1.2.1 [August 11, 2019]
- Changed
BaseResponse
to use generics as a way to simplify responses (see #3).
- Changed
-
1.2.0 [July 15, 2019]
- Changed
/api/products
endpoint to allow pagination (see #1).
- Changed
-
1.1.0 [June 18, 2019]
- Added Swagger documentation through Swashbuckle;
- Added cache through native IMemoryCache;
- Changed products listing to allow filtering by category ID, to show how to perform specific queries with EF Core;
- Changed ModelState validation to use ApiController attribute and InvalidResponseFactory in Startup.
-
1.0.0 [February 4, 2019]
- First version of the example API, presented in the tutorial on Medium and freeCodeCamp.
- ASP.NET Core 2.2;
- Entity Framework Core (for data access);
- Entity Framework In-Memory Provider (for testing purposes);
- AutoMapper (for mapping resources and models);
- Swashbuckle (API documentation).
First, install .NET Core 2.2. Then, open the terminal or command prompt at the API root path (/src/Supermarket.API/
) and run the following commands, in sequence:
dotnet restore
dotnet run
Navigate to https://localhost:5001/api/categories
to check if the API is working. If you see a HTTPS security error, just add an exception to see the results.
Navigate to https://localhost:5001/swagger
to check the API documentation.
To test all endpoints, you'll need to use a software such as Postman.