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A modern HATEOAS library for .NET to reduce your client-side validation

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Munisio

Overview

This is an ASP.NET Core HATEOAS library that enables you to easily implement HATEOAS principles in your ASP.NET Core Web API projects. HATEOAS is a constraint of the REST architectural style that allows clients to navigate a web API by following hyperlinks contained in the responses.

✨ The inspiration for this project was to use HATEOAS to remove duplicate business logic from your front-end by simply checking for the existence of links of the actions you want to perform instead. If this sounds interesting to you, you can read this blog post for more information.

❌ Minimal API's are not supported at the time of writing. Contributions are welcome!

Getting Started

To get started with this library, follow these simple steps:

1. Installation

Install the package via NuGet Package Manager:

// TODO: This can only be done after setting up NuGet publishing (#3)

dotnet add package Munisio

2. Configuration

In your Startup.cs or wherever you can configure your IServiceCollection, configure the HATEOAS service:

using Munisio;

public class Startup
{
    public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
    {
        // Add Munisio's Action Filter to your MVC pipeline
        // so your DTO's can be filled with HATEOAS links
        services.AddControllers(x => x.AddHateoas());
        // ...
    }
}

Next, you need to tell Munisio where to find your HATEOAS providers. You can do this in 2 ways:

using Munisio;

public class Startup
{
    public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
    {
        // This is done in the previous step.
        services.AddControllers(x => x.AddHateoas());
    
        // Option 1: Let Munisio search and register your providers automatically by searching the current assembly
        // or pass the assemblies that contain your providers as an argument.
        services.AddHateoasProviders(); 
    
        // Option 2: Configure your providers yourself. Tweet is a DTO in this case.
        services.AddTransient<IHateoasProvider<Tweet>, TweetHateoasProvider>();
    }
}

3. Usage

Munisio is now set up 🚀. Now you need to configure your models to support HATEOAS links.

Imagine we have the following DTO:

public class Tweet
{
    public int Id { get; set; }
    public string Text { get; set; }
    public int UserId { get; set; }
    public int Retweets { get; set; }
    public int Likes { get; set; }
    public bool IsDeleted { get; set; }
}

To be able to return HATEOAS links, you'll need to inherit from the Munisio.Models.HateoasObject class or implement the Munisio.Models.IHateoasObject interface:

public class Tweet : HateoasObject
{
    public int Id { get; set; }
    public string Text { get; set; }
    public int UserId { get; set; }
    public int Retweets { get; set; }
    public int Likes { get; set; }
    public bool IsDeleted { get; set; }

    // HateoasObject contains the following:
    // public ICollection<HateoasLink> Links { get; } = new List<HateoasLink>();

    public bool CanBeDeleted()
    {
        // This is only an example.
        // Normally you would only store this on your domain model and let it contain complex logic.
        return true;
    }
}

You'll now need to implement the IHateoasProvider<TDTOType> or IAsyncHateoasProvider<TDTOType interface, depending on if you need async support to resolve your links or not. I recommend storing these in the same project as your Web Api.

public class TweetHateoasProvider : IAsyncHateoasProvider<Tweet>
{
    public TweetHateoasProvider()
    {
        // Feel free to inject services you need to resolve links into the constructor of your providers!
    }

    public async Task EnrichAsync(IHateoasContext context, Tweet model)
    {
        // You can add links by specifying the URL to the related endpoint yourself.
        // AddLink() adds a GET link.
        // You can also use AddPatchLink(), AddDeleteLink(), AddPutLink(), AddPostLink() accordingly.
        model.AddLink("getUser", $"api/users/{model.UserId}");

        // Or you can let ASP.NET Core resolve the link itself to avoid hardcoding URLs.
        // "GetUser" would be the name of the action in a UsersController, for example.
        model.AddLink("getTweets", context.LinkGenerator.GetPathByName(context.HttpContext, "GetTweets", values: null)!);

        // The "context" property contains ASP.NET Core's authorization service so you can add links only if a user is authorized to perform a specific action.
        // Furthermore, there are multiple extension methods available after calling Add*Link() so you can have fine-grained control about when a link is added or not.
        await model
            .AddDeleteLink("delete", $"api/tweets/{model.Id}")
            .When(() => tweet.CanBeDeleted())
            .WhenAsync(() => context.AuthorizeAsync(model, Operations.Delete)); // Note: Operations.Delete is custom!

        model.AddPatchLink("retweet", context.LinkGenerator.GetPathByName(context.HttpContext, "Retweet", values: null)!);
    }
}

If you were to retrieve this tweet using api/tweets/1, the result can look like this:

{
  "id": 1,
  "text": "Just setting up my twttr.",
  "userId": 12,
  "retweets": 178778,
  "likes": 122462,
  "isDeleted": false,
  "links": [
    {
      "rel": "getUser",
      "href": "api/users/12",
      "method": "GET"
    },
    {
      "rel": "getTweets",
      "href": "api/tweets",
      "method": "GET"
    },
    {
      "rel": "delete",
      "href": "api/tweets/1",
      "method": "DELETE"
    },
    {
      "rel": "retweet",
      "href": "api/tweets/1/retweet",
      "method": "PATCH"
    }    
  ]
}

Finally:

  • I recommend taking a look at the samples folder, Intellisense in your IDE or at the HateoasExtensions.cs and HateoasLinkBuilder.cs for more options!
  • I recommend having 1 "provider class" per "type": TweetHateoasProvider could also implement IHateoasProvider<> or IAsyncHateoasProvider<> for other Tweet DTO types, like list models, etc..

Advanced features

This library contains some more advanced features.

Returning HATEOAS in lists

The samples provided in this Readme aren't very complex. More complex features can be found in the samples/ folder. One of these "advanced" features is adding HATEOAS to a list entity and onto its children. An example:

{
  "items": [
    {
      "id": 1,
      "text": "Just setting up my twttr.",
      "userId": 12,
      "retweets": 178778,
      "likes": 122462,
      "isDeleted": false,
      "links": [
        {
          "rel": "getUser",
          "href": "api/users/12",
          "method": "GET"
        },
        {
        "rel": "getTweets",
        "href": "api/tweets",
        "method": "GET"
        },
        {
          "rel": "delete",
          "href": "api/tweets/1",
          "method": "DELETE"
        },
        {
          "rel": "retweet",
          "href": "api/tweets/1/retweet",
          "method": "PATCH"
        }
      ]
    }
  ],
  "links": [
    {
      "rel": "addTweet",
      "href": "api/tweets",
      "method": "POST"
    }
  ]
}

In order to do this, you'll need to return a HateoasCollection<> from your API:

[HttpGet(Name = "GetTweets")]
public ActionResult<HateoasCollection<Tweet>> GetTweets()
{
    var tweets = _database.GetTweets();
    var mappedTweets = HateoasCollection.ForItems(tweets);
    return Ok(mappedTweets);
}

The Tweet must also inherit from HateoasObject to make this work!

Now, you can extend the previously described TweetHateoasProvider as follows to get the result mentioned above.

public class TweetHateoasProvider :
    IAsyncHateoasProvider<Tweet>,
    IHateoasProvider<HateoasCollection<Tweet>>
{
    // .... Existing code can be found above

    // New code!
    public void Enrich(IHateoasContext context, HateoasCollection<Tweet> model)
    {
        // Note: You probably want to add some more advanced checks here.
        // For example, "is the user logged in?"
        // But for now we'll keep things simple!
        model.AddPostLink("addTweet", "api/tweets");
    }
}

Storing DTO's in different assemblies

Some projects do not store their DTO's in the same assembly as their Web API where the Controllers live. In this case, you should install Munisio.Models in those assemblies so you have access to types like IHateoasObject, HateoasObject, HateoasCollection<>, etc..

// TODO: This can only be done after setting up NuGet publishing (#3)

dotnet add package Munisio.Models

This way your DTO projects do not require a FrameworkReference for ASP.NET Core.

Sample

For a more detailed usage example, check out the provided sample project in the samples folder.

Contributions

Contributions are welcome! If you find a bug or have an idea for improvement, please open an issue or submit a pull request!

License

This library is licensed under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for details.

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