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Hands-On Network Programming with C# and .NET Core

You're reading from   Hands-On Network Programming with C# and .NET Core Build robust network applications with C# and .NET Core

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2019
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781789340761
Length 488 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Sean Burns Sean Burns
Author Profile Icon Sean Burns
Sean Burns
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Toc

Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Foundations of Network Architecture FREE CHAPTER
2. Networks in a Nutshell 3. DNS and Resource Location 4. Communication Protocols 5. Packets and Streams 6. Section 2: Communicating Over Networks
7. Generating Network Requests in C# 8. Streams, Threads, and Asynchronous Data 9. Error Handling over the Wire 10. Section 3: Application Protocols and Connection Handling
11. Sockets and Ports 12. HTTP in .NET 13. FTP and SMTP 14. The Transport Layer - TCP and UDP 15. Section 4: Security, Stability, and Scalability
16. The Internet Protocol 17. Transport Layer Security 18. Authentication and Authorization on Networks 19. Caching Strategies for Distributed Systems 20. Performance Analysis and Monitoring 21. Section 5: Advanced Subjects
22. Pluggable Protocols in .NET Core 23. Network Analysis and Packet Inspection 24. Remote Logins and SSH 25. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

In this chapter, we took a thorough look at the WebRequest utility class, and how it can be used to handle a wide variety of common network operations within the context of a .NET application. We used the public interface of the class definition to infer the proper use and use cases for the class, as well as identifying the limits of its scope and operations. We considered the proper use and invocation of each of the public properties and methods defined on the base class, and wrote out some broadly applicable examples to demonstrate the simplicity and utility of the class and its children. Then, we considered the three most common concrete sub-classes of WebRequest. We examined some of the nuances between each of them and looked at how they facilitate the specific details of the protocols they were designed to operate over. Now we're ready to look at how to process...

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