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Web API Development with ASP.NET Core 8

You're reading from  Web API Development with ASP.NET Core 8

Product type Book
Published in Apr 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804610954
Pages 804 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Xiaodi Yan Xiaodi Yan
Profile icon Xiaodi Yan

Table of Contents (20) Chapters

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Fundamentals of Web APIs 2. Chapter 2: Getting Started with ASP.NET Core Web APIs 3. Chapter 3: ASP.NET Core Fundamentals (Part 1) 4. Chapter 4: ASP.NET Core Fundamentals (Part 2) 5. Chapter 5: Data Access in ASP.NET Core (Part 1: Entity Framework Core Fundamentals) 6. Chapter 6: Data Access in ASP.NET Core (Part 2 – Entity Relationships) 7. Chapter 7: Data Access in ASP.NET Core (Part 3: Tips) 8. Chapter 8: Security and Identity in ASP.NET Core 9. Chapter 9: Testing in ASP.NET Core (Part 1 – Unit Testing) 10. Chapter 10: Testing in ASP.NET Core (Part 2 – Integration Testing) 11. Chapter 11: Getting Started with gRPC 12. Chapter 12: Getting Started with GraphQL 13. Chapter 13: Getting Started with SignalR 14. Chapter 14: CI/CD for ASP.NET Core Using Azure Pipelines and GitHub Actions 15. Chapter 15: ASP.NET Core Web API Common Practices 16. Chapter 16: Error Handling, Monitoring, and Observability 17. Chapter 17: Cloud-Native Patterns 18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Error handling

When an exception occurs in an ASP.NET Core web API application, the application will throw an exception. If this exception is not handled, the application will crash and cause a 500 error. The response body will contain the stack trace of the exception. Displaying the stack trace to the client is acceptable during development. However, we should never expose the stack trace to the client in production. The stack trace contains sensitive information about the application that can be used by attackers to attack the application.

Handling exceptions

Let’s look at an example. The MyWebApiDemo sample application has a controller named UsersController, which has an action to get a user by their user ID. This action looks as follows:

[HttpGet("{id:int}")]public ActionResult<User> Get(int id)
{
    var user = Users.First(u => u.Id == id);
    if (user == null)
    {
   ...
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