Book Image

Mastering Minimal APIs in ASP.NET Core

By : Andrea Tosato, Marco Minerva, Emanuele Bartolesi
Book Image

Mastering Minimal APIs in ASP.NET Core

By: Andrea Tosato, Marco Minerva, Emanuele Bartolesi

Overview of this book

The Minimal APIs feature, introduced in .NET 6, is the answer to code complexity and rising dependencies in creating even the simplest of APIs. Minimal APIs facilitate API development using compact code syntax and help you develop web APIs quickly. This practical guide explores Minimal APIs end-to-end and helps you take advantage of its features and benefits for your ASP.NET Core projects. The chapters in this book will help you speed up your development process by writing less code and maintaining fewer files using Minimal APIs. You’ll also learn how to enable Swagger for API documentation along with CORS and handle application errors. The book even promotes ideas to structure your code in a better way using the dependency injection library in .NET. Finally, you'll learn about performance and benchmarking improvements for your apps. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to fully leverage new features in .NET 6 for API development and explore how Minimal APIs are an evolution over classical web API development in ASP.NET Core.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Part 1: Introduction
5
Part 2: What’s New in .NET 6?
10
Part 3: Advanced Development and Microservices Concepts

Handling authorization – roles and policies

Right after the authentication, there is the authorization step, which grants an authenticated user permission to do something. Minimal APIs provide the same authorization features as controller-based projects, based on the concepts of roles and policies.

When an identity is created, it may belong to one or more roles. For example, a user can belong to the Administrator role, while another can be part of two roles: User and Stakeholder. Typically, each user can perform only the operations that are allowed by their roles. Roles are just claims that are inserted in the JWT bearer upon authentication. As we’ll see in a moment, ASP.NET Core provides built-in support to verify whether a user belongs to a role.

While role-based authorization covers many scenarios, there are cases in which this kind of security isn’t enough because we need to apply more specific rules to check whether the user has the right to perform...