Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
29 lines (23 loc) · 2.82 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

29 lines (23 loc) · 2.82 KB

Quality Gate Status Nuget

The Why?

A first question would be - why create another factory for HttpClient if Microsoft have already created an excellent library in Microsoft.Http.Extensions? (take a look at this documentation article to learn more)
Microsoft's factory works and works well, but it has two drawbacks, in my case those weren't something I could work around.
First, it is tightly coupled to Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection package, which in absence of ASP.Net Core or .Net Core hosted service is not viable to use. Yes, I could initialize the dependency injection and configure it, but the resulting code was ugly and not elegant.

Second issue is package versions. I was unable to use Microsoft's HttpClient factory in projects that depended on an old version of Microsoft.Http.Extensions - in those projects I couldn't change the dependency versions, so unfortunately it was a no-go.

The What

The HttpClientFactory is lightweight, with minimal dependencies and properly handles a well-known issue of HttpClient - respecting DNS changes.
(if you are unsure what do I mean by this, there is a really awesome blogpost, it explains the issue in-depth)
Also, the factory incorporates support for Polly policies, as can be seen in the code sample below.

The How

Using the client factory is simple, and pretty self-explanatory. Here is how HttpClient that supports HTTPS and has a retry policy on transient exceptions.

public HttpClient CreateClient() =>
    HttpClientFactory.Create()
                     .WithCertificate(DefaultDevCert.Get())         // configure with one or more X509Certificate2 instances
                     .WithPolicy(Policy<HttpResponseMessage>.Handle<HttpRequestException>()
                                                            .OrResult(result => result.StatusCode >= HttpStatusCode.InternalServerError || result.StatusCode == HttpStatusCode.RequestTimeout)
                                                            .WaitAndRetryAsync(3, retryAttempt => TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1)))
                     .Build();