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  • Book Overview & Buying ASP.NET Core 9 Web API Cookbook
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ASP.NET Core 9 Web API Cookbook

ASP.NET Core 9 Web API Cookbook

By : Luke Avedon, Garry Cabrera
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ASP.NET Core 9 Web API Cookbook

ASP.NET Core 9 Web API Cookbook

5 (1)
By: Luke Avedon, Garry Cabrera

Overview of this book

Discover what makes ASP.NET Core 9 a powerful and versatile framework for building modern web APIs that are both scalable and secure. This comprehensive, recipe-based guide leverages the authors’ decade-long experience in software development to equip developers with the knowledge to create robust web API solutions using the framework's most powerful features. Designed for intermediate to advanced .NET developers, this cookbook contains hands-on recipes that demonstrate how to efficiently build, optimize, and secure APIs using this cutting-edge technology. You'll master essential topics, such as creating RESTful APIs, implementing advanced data access strategies, securing your APIs, creating custom middleware, and enhancing your logging capabilities. The book goes beyond traditional API development by introducing GraphQL, SignalR, and gRPC, offering insights into how these technologies can extend the reach of your APIs. To prepare you for real-world challenges, the recipes cover testing methodologies, cloud deployment, legacy system integration, and advanced concepts like microservices and Hangfire. By the end of this book, you’ll gain the expertise needed to build and manage enterprise-grade web APIs with ASP.NET Core 9. *Email sign-up and proof of purchase required
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
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Authentication in integration testing

The most frustrating part of creating integration tests is working with authentication. There are two approaches. The first approach is this: we simply duplicate the same authentication code that is in our API. This is especially straightforward if we are using a stateless JWT authentication token. We create the same token in the same way as we do in our API and add it to HttpContext. Then, we use normal HTTP requests in our integration tests. The system under test goes through its normal authentication process. The advantage is we have a lot of fine-grained control. The disadvantage to this setup is that it is extremely brittle. If any detail of authentication changes in our API, we have to duplicate that same code exactly the same way in our integration tests.

The other option is to create a custom authentication handler. When WebApplicationFactory<T> starts our API in test, we temporarily override the normal authentication service....

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