Book Image

Learning ASP.NET Core MVC Programming

By : Mugilan T. S. Ragupathi, Anuraj Parameswaran
Book Image

Learning ASP.NET Core MVC Programming

By: Mugilan T. S. Ragupathi, Anuraj Parameswaran

Overview of this book

ASP.NET Core MVC helps you build robust web applications using the Model-View-Controller design. This guide will help you in building applications which can be deployed on non-windows platforms such as Linux. In today’s age, it is crucial that you possess the ability to separate the programming and business logic, and this is exactly what ASP.NET Core MVC application will help you achieve. This version comes with a number of improvements that enable fast, TDD-friendly development to create sophisticated applications. You would also learn the fundamentals of Entity framework and on how to use the same in ASP.NET Core web applications. The book presents the fundamentals and philosophies of ASP.NET Core. Starting with an overview of the MVC pattern, we quickly dive into the aspects that you need to know to get started with ASP.NET. You will learn about the core architecture of model, view, and control. Integrating your application with Bootstrap, validating user input, interacting with databases, and deploying your application are some of the things that you will be able to execute with this fast-paced guide. The end of the book will test your knowledge as you build a fully working sample application using the skills you’ve learned throughout the book.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Learning ASP.NET Core MVC Programming
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
10
Building HTTP-based Web Services Using ASP.NET Web API

Securing an action method in a Controller


For the sake of explanation, let us assume that the About page is a secure page and only authenticated users should be able to access it.

We just have to decorate the About action method in the Home controller with an[Authorize] attribute:

[Authorize] 
        public IActionResult About() 
        { 
            ViewData["Message"] = "This is my about page"; 
            return View(); 
        } 

Making the preceding change will redirect the user to the log-in page when the user tries to access the log-in page without logging in to the application:

In the following screenshot, you will notice an additional query parameter, ReturnURL, in the URL. This ReturnURL parameter will redirect the application to that specific page (the value passed in the ReturnURL parameter—Home/About in our case).

Once you log in, you'll be redirected to the page that you requested earlier:

When you register a new user, the details of the user...