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Mastering ASP.NET Web API

You're reading from   Mastering ASP.NET Web API Build powerful HTTP services and make the most of the ASP.NET Core Web API platform

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786463951
Length 330 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Malendra Hurbuns Malendra Hurbuns
Author Profile Icon Malendra Hurbuns
Malendra Hurbuns
Mithun Pattankar Mithun Pattankar
Author Profile Icon Mithun Pattankar
Mithun Pattankar
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Microservices and Service-Oriented Architecture FREE CHAPTER 2. Understanding HTTP and REST 3. Anatomy of ASP.NET Core Web API 4. Controllers, Actions, and Models 5. Implementing Routing 6. Middleware and Filters 7. Perform Unit and Integration Testing 8. Web API Security 9. Integration with Database 10. Error Handling, Tracing, and Logging 11. Optimization and Performance 12. Hosting and Deployment 13. Modern Web Frontends

Basics of Logging in ASP.NET Core

One of ASP.NET Core's features is its in-built logging using ILoggerFactory. Right away, when you create an ASP.NET Core application (empty-, MVC-, or web API-based), you will see that the IWebHost's CreateDefaultBuilder method of the program class does the ground-level work for the Logging functionality to work-it reads the appsettings.json file for the logging section to provide all the necessary infrastructure to log information to debug or console window.

The use of Logging is greatly simplified by ILoggerFactory in two parts--AddProvider and CreateLogger.

The AddProvider method takes in ILoggerProvider to write/store the logging information generated by the application. The provider can either be a console, debug window, file, database, cloud-based storage, or third-party log analysis service (Splunk, Raygun, Loggly, and so on)...

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