Book Image

Customizing ASP.NET Core 5.0

By : Jürgen Gutsch
Book Image

Customizing ASP.NET Core 5.0

By: Jürgen Gutsch

Overview of this book

ASP.NET Core is the most powerful Microsoft web framework. Although it’s full of rich features, sometimes the default configurations can be a bottleneck and need to be customized to suit the nature and scale of your app. If you’re an intermediate-level .NET developer who wants to extend .NET Core to multiple use cases, it's important to customize these features so that the framework works for you effectively. Customizing ASP.NET Core 5.0 covers core features that can be customized for developing optimized apps. The customization techniques are also updated to work with the latest .NET 5 framework. You’ll learn essential concepts relating to optimizing the framework such as configuration, dependency injection, routing, action filters, and more. As you progress, you’ll be able to create custom solutions that meet the needs of your use case with ASP.NET Core. Later chapters will cover expert techniques and best practices for using the framework for your app development needs, from UI design to hosting. Finally, you’ll focus on the new endpoint routing in ASP.NET Core to build custom endpoints and add third-party endpoints to your web apps for processing requests faster. By the end of this application development book, you’ll have the skills you need to be able to customize ASP.NET Core to develop robust optimized apps.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Summary

You can now start to do some more complex things with IHostedService and the BackgroundService. Be careful with background services, because they all run in the same application; if you use too much CPU or memory, this could slow down your application.

For bigger applications, I would suggest running such tasks in a separate application that is specialized for executing background tasks: a separate Docker container, a BackgroundWorker type on Azure, Azure Functions, or something like that. However, it should be separate from the main application in that case.

In the next chapter, we will learn about middleware, and how you can use them to implement special logic on the request pipeline, or serve specific logic on different paths.