MallardMessageHandlers 1.2.1

dotnet add package MallardMessageHandlers --version 1.2.1                
NuGet\Install-Package MallardMessageHandlers -Version 1.2.1                
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="MallardMessageHandlers" Version="1.2.1" />                
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add MallardMessageHandlers --version 1.2.1                
#r "nuget: MallardMessageHandlers, 1.2.1"                
#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 MallardMessageHandlers as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=MallardMessageHandlers&version=1.2.1

// Install MallardMessageHandlers as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=MallardMessageHandlers&version=1.2.1                

MallardMessageHandlers 🦆

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MallardMessageHandlers offers DelegatingHandlers which will be handy in many projects which use the HTTP stack.

Getting Started

Add to your project a reference to the MallardMessageHandlers nuget package.

DelegatingHandlers are decorators of HttpMessageHandler. They are used to add logic to HttpRequests before their execution and after their execution. You would generally create a pipeline of DelegatingHandlers to send and interpret HttpRequests.

HttpClient -> Handler1 -> Handler2 -> Handler3 -> (...before)
                                                               Network
HttpClient <- Handler1 <- Handler2 <- Handler3 <- (...after)

You can create a pipeline of DelegatingHandlers using the IHttpClientFactory.

The order is extremely important as it will define the sequence of execution.

The following example shows how you would create the above pipeline.

public IHttpClientBuilder ConfigureMyEndpoint(IServiceCollection services)
{
  return services
    .AddHttpClient("MyHttpClient")
    .AddHttpMessageHandler<Handler1>()
    .AddHttpMessageHandler<Handler2>()
    .AddHttpMessageHandler<Handler3>()
}

This repository contains multiple implementations of DelegatingHandlers for different purposes.

Here is a list of the DelegatingHandlers provided.

You can find official documentation on using delegating handlers here: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/aspnet/web-api/overview/advanced/http-message-handlers.

Features

NetworkExceptionHandler

The NetworkExceptionHandler is a DelegatingHandler that throws a specific type of exception if an exception occurs during the HttpRequest execution and the network availability check returns false.

By default, the NetworkExceptionHandler will throw a NoNetworkException.

To create a NetworkExceptionHandler, you provide a delegate that will check the network availability.

Note: The network availability check will only be called if an exception occurs during the HttpRequest execution.

var networkAvailabilityChecker = new NetworkAvailabilityChecker(GetIsNetworkAvailable);
var networkExceptionHandler = new NetworkExceptionHandler(networkAvailabilityChecker);

private Task<bool> GetIsNetworkAvailable(CancellationToken ct)
{
  // Add your network connectivity check here.
}

You can set your own type of exception returned by the handler by implementing INetworkExceptionFactory.

var exceptionFactory = new MyNetworkExceptionFactory();
var handler = new NetworkExceptionHandler(networkAvailabilityChecker, exceptionFactory);

private class MyNetworkExceptionFactory : INetworkExceptionFactory
{
  ...
}

You would generally register the NetworkExceptionHandler on your IServiceProvider.

private void ConfigureNetworkExceptionHandler(IServiceCollection services)
{
  // The NetworkAvailabilityChecker must be shared for all HttpRequests so we add it as singleton.
  services.AddSingleton<INetworkAvailabilityChecker>(s => new NetworkAvailabilityChecker(GetIsNetworkAvailable));

  // The NetworkExceptionHandler must be recreated for all HttpRequests so we add it as transient.
  services.AddTransient<NetworkExceptionHandler>();
}

SimpleCacheHandler

The SimpleCacheHandler is a DelegatingHandler that executes custom caching instructions.

When you use Refit for your endpoints declaration, you can neatly specify caching instructions with attributes. Just install the the MallardMessageHandler.Refit package to get those Refit-compatible attributes.

  • You can specify time-to-live at different levels.
    • On a per-call level (using attributes)
    • Globally (using default headers)
  • You can support force-refresh scenarios (i.e. don't read the cache, but update it). This can be useful for things like pull-to-refresh.
  • You can disable the cache on a per-call level. This only makes sense when you define default caching globally.
using MallardMessageHandlers.SimpleCaching;

public interface ISampleEndpoint
{
  [Get("/sample")]
  Task<string> GetSampleDefault(CancellationToken ct, [ForceRefresh] bool forceRefresh = false);

  [Get("/sample")]
  [TimeToLive(totalMinutes: 5)] // You can customize the TTL on a per-call basis.
  Task<string> GetSampleCustomTTL(CancellationToken ct, [ForceRefresh] bool forceRefresh = false);

  [Get("/sample")]
  [NoCache] // When you have a default TTL, you can bypass it on a per-call basis.
  Task<string> GetSampleNoCache(CancellationToken ct);
}

Here's how you can configure a default time-to-live for all calls.

serviceCollection
  .AddRefitClient<ISampleEndpoint>()
  .ConfigureHttpClient((client) =>
  {
    // You can configure a default time-to-live for all calls.
    // "600" represents 10 minutes (600 seconds).
    client.DefaultRequestHeaders.Add(SimpleCacheHandler.CacheTimeToLiveHeaderName, "600");
  });

The SimpleCacheHandler has a few dependencies.

  • ISimpleCacheService which implements the actual caching of data.
    • The interface is pretty simple, so you can easily create implementations.
    • You can also use our MemorySimpleCacheService implementation.
  • ISimpleCacheKeyProvider which generates the cache keys from the HttpMessageRequest objects.
    • You can use the SimpleCacheKeyProvider to create your keys using a custom Func<HttpRequestMessage,string>.
    • You can also use one of our built-in implementations:
      • SimpleCacheKeyProvider.FromUriOnly
      • SimpleCacheKeyProvider.FromUriAndAuthorizationHash
private void ConfigureCacheHandler(IServiceCollection services)
{
  // The ISimpleCacheService and ISimpleCacheKeyProvider are shared for all HttpRequests so we add them as singleton.
  services
    .AddSingleton<ISimpleCacheService, MemorySimpleCacheService>();
    .AddSingleton<ISimpleCacheKeyProvider>(CacheKeyProvider.FromUriOnly);

  // The SimpleCacheHandler must be recreated for all HttpRequests so we add it as transient.
  services.AddTransient<SimpleCacheHandler>();
}

ExceptionHubHandler

The ExceptionHubHandler is a DelegatingHandler that will report all exceptions thrown during the execution of the HttpRequest to an IExceptionHub.

To create a ExceptionHubHandler, you provide a IExceptionHub that you will use to receive the exceptions.

var exceptionHub = new ExceptionHub();
var handler = new exceptionHubHandler(exceptionHub);

exceptionHub.OnExceptionReported += OnExceptionReported;

void OnExceptionReported(object sender, Exception e)
{
  // This will be called everytime an exception occurs during the execution of the HttpRequests.
}

You would generally register the ExceptionHubHandler on your IServiceProvider.

private void ConfigureExceptionHubHandler(IServiceCollection services)
{
  // The ExceptionHub must be shared for all HttpRequests so we add it as singleton.
  services.AddSingleton<IExceptionHub, ExceptionHub>();

  // The ExceptionHubHandler must be recreated for all HttpRequests so we add it as transient.
  services.AddTransient<ExceptionHubHandler>();
}

ExceptionInterpreterHandler

The ExceptionInterpreterHandler is a DelegatingHandler that will interpret the response of an HttpRequest and throw a specific type of exception if the response is considered in error.

To create a ExceptionInterpreterHandler, you provide a response interpreter and a deserializer.

var interpreter = new ErrorResponseInterpreter<TestResponse>(
  // Whether or not this interpreter should throw an exception.
  (request, response, deserializedResponse) => deserializedResponse.Error != null, 

  // The exception that should be thrown.
  (request, response, deserializedResponse) => new TestException(deserializedResponse.Error) 
);

// Use your response deserializer.
var deserializer = new ResponseContentDeserializer();

var handler = new ExceptionInterpreterHandler<TestResponse>(interpreter, deserializer);

You would generally register the ExceptionInterpreterHandler on your IServiceProvider.

private void ConfigureExceptionInterpreterHandler(IServiceCollection services)
{
  // The ResponseContentDeserializer must be shared for all HttpRequests so we add it as singleton.
  services.AddSingleton<IResponseContentDeserializer, ResponseContentDeserializer>();

  // The ErrorResponseInterpreter must be shared for all HttpRequests so we add it as singleton.
  services.AddSingleton<IErrorResponseInterpreter<TestResponse>>(s => ...);

  // The ExceptionInterpreterHandler must be recreated for all HttpRequests so we add it as transient.
  services.AddTransient<ExceptionInterpreterHandler<TestResponse>>();
}

AuthenticationTokenHandler

The AuthenticationTokenHandler is a DelegatingHandler that will add the value of the authentication token to the Authorization header if the header is present. It will also refresh the token if possible and notify if the authenticated session should be considered as expired.

For example, if you have a Refit endpoint with the following header, the authentication token will automatically be added to the Authorization header of the HttpRequest.

// This adds the Authorization header to all API calls of this endpoint.
[Headers("Authorization: Bearer")]
public interface IMyEndpoint
{
  [Get("/categories")]
  Task<Category[]> GetCategories(CancellationToken ct);
}

To create a AuthenticationTokenHandler, you provide an IAuthenticationTokenProvider.

There is an implementation of IAuthenticationTokenProvider that receives the different delegates as parameters but you can create your own implementation.

var authenticationService = new AuthenticationService();

var authenticationTokenProvider = new ConcurrentAuthenticationTokenProvider<MyAuthenticationToken>(
  loggerFactory: null,
  getToken: (ct, request) => authenticationService.GetToken(ct, request),
  notifySessionExpired: (ct, request, token) => authenticationService.NotifySessionExpired(ct, request, token),
  refreshToken: (ct, request, token) => authenticationService.RefreshToken(ct, request, token)  // Optional
);

var authenticationHandler = new AuthenticationTokenHandler<MyAuthenticationToken>(authenticationTokenProvider);

public class MyAuthenticationToken : IAuthenticationToken
{
  public string AccessToken { get; set; } // Access token used for the header.

  public string RefreshToken { get; set; } // Refresh token used to refresh the access token.

  public bool CanBeRefreshed => RefreshToken != null; // Whether or not the access token can be refreshed.
}

public class MyAuthenticationService
{
  public Task<MyAuthenticationToken> GetToken(CancellationToken ct, HttpRequestMessage request)
  {
    // Return the authentication token from your app settings.
  }

  public Task<MyAuthenticationToken> RefreshToken(CancellationToken ct, HttpRequestMessage request, MyAuthenticationToken unauthorizedToken)
  {
    // Refresh the authentication token with your API.
  }

  public Task NotifySessionExpired(CancellationToken ct, HttpRequestMessage request, MyAuthenticationToken unauthorizedToken)
  {
    // This will occur if the token is expired and it couldn't be refreshed.
    // This should generally result in a user logout.
  }
}

You would generally register the AuthenticationTokenHandler on your IServiceProvider.

private void ConfigureAuthenticationTokenHandler(IServiceCollection services)
{
  // The AuthenticationTokenProvider must be shared for all HttpRequests so we add it as singleton.
  services.AddSingleton<IAuthenticationTokenProvider<MyAuthenticationToken>, MyAuthenticationTokenProvider>();

  // The AuthenticationTokenHandler must be recreated for all HttpRequests so we add it as transient.
  services.AddTransient<AuthenticationTokenHandler<MyAuthenticationToken>>();
}

Breaking Changes

Please consult the BREAKING_CHANGES.md for more information about breaking changes and version history.

License

This project is licensed under the Apache 2.0 license - see the LICENSE file for details.

Contributing

Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on the process for contributing to this project.

Be mindful of our Code of Conduct.

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NuGet packages (1)

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MallardMessageHandlers.Refit

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Version Downloads Last updated
1.2.1 343 10/9/2024
1.2.0 22,404 1/9/2023
1.1.0 2,676 10/20/2022
1.0.0 726 10/18/2022
0.2.0-dev.26 118 10/17/2022
0.2.0-dev.21 63,501 3/30/2021
0.2.0-dev.18 240 1/14/2021
0.2.0-dev.16 27,074 10/13/2020
0.2.0-dev.13 1,559 9/30/2020
0.2.0-dev.11 2,713 6/26/2020