Book Image

Mastering ABP Framework

By : Halil İbrahim Kalkan
Book Image

Mastering ABP Framework

By: Halil İbrahim Kalkan

Overview of this book

ABP Framework is a complete infrastructure for creating modern web applications by following software development best practices and conventions. With ABP's high-level framework and ecosystem, you can implement the Don’t Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle and focus on your business code. Written by the creator of ABP Framework, this book will help you to gain a complete understanding of the framework and modern web application development techniques. With step-by-step explanations of essential concepts and practical examples, you'll understand the requirements of a modern web solution and how ABP Framework makes it enjoyable to develop your own solutions. You'll discover the common requirements of enterprise web application development and explore the infrastructure provided by ABP. Throughout the book, you’ll get to grips with software development best practices for building maintainable and modular web solutions. By the end of this book, you'll be able to create a complete web solution that is easy to develop, maintain, and test.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
1
Part 1: Introduction
6
Part 2: Fundamentals of ABP Framework
11
Part 3: Implementing Domain–Driven Design
15
Part 4: User Interface and API Development
19
Part 5: Miscellaneous

Controlling the audit logging system

ABP's audit logging system tracks all requests and entity changes and writes them into a database. Then, you can get a report of what was done in your application, when it was made, and who did it.

The audit log system is installed and properly configured when you create a new solution from the startup templates. Most of the time, you use it without any configuration. However, ABP allows you to control, customize, and extend the audit logging system. But first, let's understand what an audit log object is.

Audit log object

An audit log object is a group of actions and related entity changes performed together in a limited scope, typically in an HTTP request for a web application. We will talk more about audit log scopes in the next section.

The diagram in Figure 8.1 represents an audit log object:

Figure 8.1 – Audit log object

Let's explain that diagram by beginning from the root object...