Protocol Buffers are Google's language-neutral, platform-neutral, extensible mechanism for serializing structured data – think XML, but smaller, faster, and simpler.
Provides extension methods for System.Net.Http.HttpClient and System.Net.Http.HttpContent that perform automatic serialization and deserialization using ProtoBuf.
This package actually depends on Microsoft.Net.Http
, and extends the HttpClient
with ProtoBuf
features that you would likely need to talk to a RESTful service such as ASP.NET Web API.
Package operates in the System.Net.Http
namespace and adds some handy extension methods to HttpClient
and HttpContent
.
So for example:
using (var client = new HttpClient())
{
var product = await client.GetFromProtoBufAsync<Product>("http://localhost/api/products/1");
}
or
using (var client = new HttpClient())
{
var response = await _client.GetAsync("http://localhost/api/products/1");
response.EnsureSuccessStatusCode();
var product = await response.Content.ReadFromProtoBufAsync<Product>();
}
or
using (var client = new HttpClient())
{
var request = new HttpRequestMessage(HttpMethod.Post, "http://localhost/api/products/1");
request.Content = ProtoBufContent.Create(new Product());
var response = await _client.SendAsync(request);
response.EnsureSuccessStatusCode();
}
If you tried to just use Microsoft.Net.Http
, the GetFromProtoBufAsync
method wouldn't be available to you, and you'd only be able to read the content
as raw data such as bytes or string, and have to do the serializing / de-serializing yourself.
You also get extension methods to PUT / POST back to the service in ProtoBuf
format without having to do that yourself:
await client.PutAsProtoBufAsync("http://localhost/api/products/1", product);
await client.PostAsProtoBufAsync("http://localhost/api/products/1", product);
This package also adds ProtoBufMediaTypeFormatter
class for formatting HttpClient
requests and responses:
using (var client = new HttpClient())
{
var formatter = new ProtoBufMediaTypeFormatter();
var request = new SearchProductRequest { Name = 'iphone', OrderBy = 'id' };
var content = new ObjectContent<SearchProductRequest>(request, formatter);
var response = await client.PostAsync("http://localhost/api/products:search", content);
var products = await response.Content.ReadAsAsync<Product[]>(new[] {formatter});
}
dotnet add package Byndyusoft.Net.Http.ProtoBuf
To contribute, you will need to setup your local environment, see prerequisites. For the contribution and workflow guide, see package development lifecycle.
A detailed overview on how to contribute can be found in the contributing guide.
Make sure you have installed all of the following prerequisites on your development machine:
- Git - Download & Install Git. OSX and Linux machines typically have this already installed.
- .NET Core (version 3.1 or higher) - Download & Install .NET Core.
- source code
- unit-tests
- Implement package logic in
src
- Add or addapt unit-tests (prefer before and simultaneously with coding) in
tests
- Add or change the documentation as needed
- Open pull request in the correct branch. Target the project's
master
branch