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Hands-On RESTful Web Services with ASP.NET Core 3

You're reading from   Hands-On RESTful Web Services with ASP.NET Core 3 Design production-ready, testable, and flexible RESTful APIs for web applications and microservices

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789537611
Length 510 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Samuele Resca Samuele Resca
Author Profile Icon Samuele Resca
Samuele Resca
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Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Getting Started FREE CHAPTER
2. REST 101 and Getting Started with ASP.NET Core 3. Section 2: Overview of ASP.NET Core
4. Overview of ASP.NET Core 5. Working with the Middleware Pipeline 6. Dependency Injection System 7. Web Service Stack in ASP.NET Core 8. Routing System 9. Filter Pipeline 10. Section 3: Building a Real-World RESTful API
11. Building the Data Access Layer 12. Implementing the Domain Logic 13. Implementing the RESTful HTTP Layer 14. Advanced Concepts of Building an API 15. The Containerization of Services 16. Service Ecosystem Patterns 17. Implementing Worker Services Using .NET Core 18. Securing Your Service 19. Section 4: Advanced Concepts for Building Services
20. Caching Web Service Responses 21. Logging and Health Checking 22. Deploying Services on Azure 23. Documenting Your API Using Swagger 24. Testing Services Using Postman 25. Other Books You May Enjoy

Implementing the domain model

As discussed in the Data transfer section in Chapter 5, Web Service Stack in ASP.NET Core, the domain model is the representation of the data handled by our service. Thinking about a catalog web service for a music store, the primary data we need to process includes the entities used by the API.

To guarantee reusability and loose coupling, we are going to define the domain model of the service in a separate project. First of all, let's create a new Catalog.Domain project inside the src folder by executing the following command:

dotnet new classlib -n Catalog.Domain -f netstandard2.1

The above command also specifies the netstandard2.1 version as target framework. Furthermore, after creating the Catalog.Domain project, we need to add it to our solution:

dotnet sln ../Catalog.API.sln add Catalog.Domain

The preceding instruction adds a reference...

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