Book Image

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

By : Samuele Resca
Book Image

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

By: Samuele Resca

Overview of this book

In recent times, web services have evolved to play a prominent role in web development. Applications are now designed to be compatible with any device and platform, and web services help us keep their logic and UI separate. Given its simplicity and effectiveness in creating web services, the RESTful approach has gained popularity, and this book will help you build RESTful web services using ASP.NET Core. This REST book begins by introducing you to the basics of the REST philosophy, where you'll study the different stages of designing and implementing enterprise-grade RESTful web services. You'll also gain a thorough understanding of ASP.NET Core's middleware approach and learn how to customize it. The book will later guide you through improving API resilience, securing your service, and applying different design patterns and techniques to achieve a scalable web service. In addition to this, you'll learn advanced techniques for caching, monitoring, and logging, along with implementing unit and integration testing strategies. In later chapters, you will deploy your REST web services on Azure and document APIs using Swagger and external tools such as Postman. By the end of this book, you will have learned how to design RESTful web services confidently using ASP.NET Core with a focus on code testability and maintainability.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Getting Started
3
Section 2: Overview of ASP.NET Core
10
Section 3: Building a Real-World RESTful API
19
Section 4: Advanced Concepts for Building Services

Securing APIs with token-based authentication

Applications have traditionally persisted identity through session cookies, relying on session IDs stored on the server-side. This method brings a few significant problems and pitfalls: it is not scalable, because you need a common point where you can store sessions and, every time a user is authenticated; the server will need to create a new record in a data source. Therefore, this approach may become a significant bottleneck for your web service.

Nowadays, token authentication can be helpful to authenticate and authorize users, especially in a distributed system context. The main strength of token-based authentication lies in the fact that the consumer asks for a token to an identity service. Next, the client can store the token locally and use it for authentication and authorization purposes.

Therefore, token authentication is...