LittleRestClient 2.0.0

dotnet add package LittleRestClient --version 2.0.0                
NuGet\Install-Package LittleRestClient -Version 2.0.0                
This command is intended to be used within the Package Manager Console in Visual Studio, as it uses the NuGet module's version of Install-Package.
<PackageReference Include="LittleRestClient" Version="2.0.0" />                
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add LittleRestClient --version 2.0.0                
#r "nuget: LittleRestClient, 2.0.0"                
#r directive can be used in F# Interactive and Polyglot Notebooks. Copy this into the interactive tool or source code of the script to reference the package.
// Install LittleRestClient as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=LittleRestClient&version=2.0.0

// Install LittleRestClient as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=LittleRestClient&version=2.0.0                

LittleRestClient

Build Status

Working on an easy rest client compatible with .net core and standard 2.0. It isn't designed to be a verbose solution. If you just need to do basic calls to an api this should work great.

Installation

Available on Nuget

Visual Studio:

PM> Install-Package LittleRestClient

.NET Core CLI:

dotnet add package LittleRestClient

Constructors

The simplest way to use LittleRestClient is pass the api's base url into the constructor.

var restClient = new RestClient("http://example.com/api/");

There is also a constructor that takes an IRestClientConfig object. You can implement this interface, and pass it into the constructor.

    public interface IRestClientConfig
    {
        string BaseUrl { get; } //Required eg "Https://example.com/api/"
        string ApiToken { get; } //Blank by default
        string UserAgent { get; } //"LittleRestClient"
        string ContentType { get; } //"application/json"
        string AcceptType { get; } //"application/json"
    }

The only proeprty that is required is BaseUrl

Public Methods

All public methods are Async so they are all wrapped in a Task. Also all public methods other than GetStringAsync return a RestClientResponse or RestClientResponse<TResult> object depending on the response expected. These objects have the following properties

    public class RestClientResponse
    {
        public virtual HttpResponseHeaders Headers { get; internal set; }
        public virtual bool IsSuccessStatusCode { get; internal set; }
        public virtual HttpStatusCode StatusCode { get; internal set; }
        public virtual string ReasonPhrase { get; internal set; }
    }
        //Or if you are expecting data back.
    public class RestClientResponse<TResult> : RestClientResponse
    {
        public virtual TResult Data { get; internal set; }
    }

GetStringAsync

This method will do a GET to the endpoint described in the route. It will return the body of the response as a string. by default this response will be in json format. I usually use this call to test endpoints, and view the json so I can create objects to deserialize into. It can be used like below.

string route = $"users/{userId}";
string json = await restClient.GetStringAsync(route);

Notice that the route is just what you need to add to the base url to complete the full path.

GetAsync< TResult>

This method will do a GET to the endpoint described in the route. It takes a generic that describes what kind of object the method should deserialize the data into. The method can also take a CancellationToken.

string route = $"users/{userId}";
RestClientResponse<User> response = await restClient.GetAsync<User>(route);
User user = response.Data;

PostAsync< TBody>

This method will do a POST to the endpoint described in the route. It takes an object body that it will serialize and send. The response doesn't contain a payload only the call status. The method can also take a CancellationToken.

string route = $"users";
User user = new User();
RestClientResponse response = await restClient.PostAsync(route, user);
return response.IsSuccessStatusCode;

PostAsync<TBody,TResult>

This method will do a POST to the endpoint described in the route. It takes an object body that it will serialize and send. The response contain a payload that will be deserialized into a TResult object in the data field of the RestClientResponse. The method can also take a CancellationToken.

string route = $"users";
User user = new User();
RestClientResponse<UserInfo> response = await restClient.PostAsync<User, UserInfo>(route, user);
UserInfo userInfo = response.Data;

PutAsync< TBody>

This method will do a PUT to the endpoint described in the route. It takes an object body that it will serialize and send. The response doesn't contain a payload only the call status. The method can also take a CancellationToken.

string route = $"users/{userId}";
RestClientResponse response = await restClient.PutAsync(route, user);
return response.IsSuccessStatusCode;

PutAsync<TBody,TResult>

TThis method will do a PUT to the endpoint described in the route. It takes an object body that it will serialize and send. The response contain a payload that will be deserialized into a TResult object in the data field of the RestClientResponse. The method can also take a CancellationToken.

string route = $"users/{userId}";
RestClientResponse<UserInfo> response = await restClient.PutAsync<User, UserInfo>(route, user);
UserInfo userInfo = response.Data;

PatchAsync< TBody>

This method will do a PATCH to the endpoint described in the route. It takes an object body that it will serialize and send. The response doesn't contain a payload only the call status. The method can also take a CancellationToken.

string route = $"users/{userId}";
RestClientResponse response = await restClient.PatchAsync(route, user);
return response.IsSuccessStatusCode;

PatchAsync<TBody,TResult>

TThis method will do a PATCH to the endpoint described in the route. It takes an object body that it will serialize and send. The response contain a payload that will be deserialized into a TResult object in the data field of the RestClientResponse. The method can also take a CancellationToken.

string route = $"users/{userId}";
RestClientResponse<UserInfo> response = await restClient.PatchAsync<User, UserInfo>(route, user);
UserInfo userInfo = response.Data;

DeleteAsync

This method will do a DELETE to the endpoint described in the route. It doesn't send or receive a payload. The response only contains the call status. The method can also take a CancellationToken.

string route = $"users/{userId}";
RestClientResponse response = await restClient.DeleteAsync(route);
return response.IsSuccessStatusCode;

DeleteAsync< TResult>

TThis method will do a DELETE to the endpoint described in the route. It doesn't send a payload. The response contain a payload that will be deserialized into a TResult object in the data field of the RestClientResponse. The method can also take a CancellationToken.

string route = $"users/{userId}";
RestClientResponse<UserInfo> response = await restClient.DeleteAsync<UserInfo>(route);
UserInfo userInfo = response.Data;

Dispose

RestClient implements IDisposable (because HttpClient implements it). You can override Dispose if you need to. (by default it just calls the dispose method on HttpClient)

Protected Methods

If you need more or different functionallity than what you see above, you can always create a class that inherits from RestClient

SerializeObject< TBody>

By default all serialization and deserialization is done with Newtonsoft.Json. If you need xml serialization, or something else, you can overwrite this function, and plug in your own String serializer.

CreateRequestContent< TBody>

Notice in the SerializeObject description it enphasizes string serializer. If you need to send content as somethign other than string. byte[] for examle, you need to create a different HttpContent type. THis function is where that can happen.

DeserializeObjectAsync< TResult>

Deserialize is also Newtonsoft.Json by default. you can overwrite this to deserializae with a different deserializer, unlike the serialize method it could be of any HttpContent type.

Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net6.0 is compatible.  net6.0-android was computed.  net6.0-ios was computed.  net6.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net6.0-macos was computed.  net6.0-tvos was computed.  net6.0-windows was computed.  net7.0 was computed.  net7.0-android was computed.  net7.0-ios was computed.  net7.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net7.0-macos was computed.  net7.0-tvos was computed.  net7.0-windows was computed.  net8.0 was computed.  net8.0-android was computed.  net8.0-browser was computed.  net8.0-ios was computed.  net8.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net8.0-macos was computed.  net8.0-tvos was computed.  net8.0-windows was computed. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.

NuGet packages

This package is not used by any NuGet packages.

GitHub repositories

This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.

Version Downloads Last updated
2.0.0 100 7/15/2024
1.2.1.2 769 3/4/2019 1.2.1.2 is deprecated because it is no longer maintained.
1.2.1 1,111 4/2/2018
1.2.0 1,017 3/26/2018
1.1.4 1,120 3/23/2018
1.1.3 965 3/21/2018
1.1.2 964 3/19/2018