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Customizing ASP.NET Core 6.0 - Second Edition

You're reading from  Customizing ASP.NET Core 6.0 - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Dec 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803233604
Pages 204 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Jürgen Gutsch Jürgen Gutsch
Profile icon Jürgen Gutsch
Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Customizing Logging 2. Chapter 2: Customizing App Configuration 3. Chapter 3: Customizing Dependency Injection 4. Chapter 4: Configuring and Customizing HTTPS with Kestrel 5. Chapter 5: Configuring WebHostBuilder 6. Chapter 6: Using Different Hosting Models 7. Chapter 7: Using IHostedService and BackgroundService 8. Chapter 8: Writing Custom Middleware 9. Chapter 9: Working with Endpoint Routing 10. Chapter 10: Customizing ASP.NET Core Identity 11. Chapter 11: Configuring Identity Management 12. Chapter 12: Content Negotiation Using a Custom OutputFormatter 13. Chapter 13: Managing Inputs with Custom ModelBinder 14. Chapter 14: Creating a Custom ActionFilter 15. Chapter 15: Working with Caches 16. Chapter 16: Creating Custom TagHelper 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

ASP.NET Core architecture overview

To follow the next chapters, you should be familiar with the base architecture of ASP.NET Core and its components. This book tackles almost all of the components of the architecture.

The following figure shows the base architecture overview of ASP.NET Core 6.0. Let's quickly go through the components shown here from the bottom to the top layer:

At the bottom, there is the Host layer. This is the layer that bootstraps the web server and all the stuff that is needed to start up an ASP.NET Core application, including logging, configuration, and the service provider. This layer creates the actual request objects and their dependencies that are used in the layers above.

The next layer above Host is the Middleware layer. This layer works with the request object or manipulates it. This attaches the middleware to the request object. It executes the middleware for things such as error handling, authenticating HSTS, CORS, and so on.

Above that, there is the Routing layer, which routes the request to the endpoints depending on the route patterns defined. Endpoint routing is the new player from ASP.NET Core 3.1 and separates routing from the UI layers above to enable routing for different endpoints, including Blazor, gRPC, and SignalR. As a reminder: in previous versions of ASP.NET Core, routing was part of the MVC layer, and every other UI layer needed to implement its own routing.

The actual endpoints are provided by the fourth layer, the UI layer, which contains the well-known UI frameworks Blazor, gRPC, SignalR, and MVC. This is where you will do most of your work as an ASP.NET Core developer.

Lastly, above MVC, you will find WebAPI and Razor Pages.

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