Join the new google group or follow @demisbellot and @ServiceStack for twitter updates.
Service Stack is a high-performance .NET web services framework (including a number of high-performance sub-components: see below) that simplifies the development of XML, JSON, JSV and WCF SOAP Web Services. For more info check out servicestack.net.
[DataContract]
public class GetFactorial
{
[DataMember]
public long ForNumber { get; set; }
}
[DataContract]
public class GetFactorialResponse
{
[DataMember]
public long Result { get; set; }
}
public class GetFactorialService : IService<GetFactorial>
{
public object Execute(GetFactorial request)
{
return new GetFactorialResponse { Result = GetFactorial(request.ForNumber) };
}
static long GetFactorial(long n)
{
return n > 1 ? n * GetFactorial(n - 1) : 1;
}
}
//no code-gen required, can re-use above DTO's
var serviceClient = new XmlServiceClient("http://localhost/ServiceStack.Examples.Host.Web/ServiceStack/");
var response = this.ServiceClient.Send<GetFactorialResponse>(new GetFactorial { ForNumber = 3 });
Console.WriteLine("Result: {0}", response.Result);
var serviceClient = new JsonServiceClient("http://localhost/ServiceStack.Examples.Host.Web/ServiceStack/");
serviceClient.getFromService({GetFactorial: { ForNumber: 3 }}, function(e) {
alert(e.Result);
});
That's all the application code required to create a simple web service.
Preview links using just the above code sample with (live demo running on Linux): XML, JSON, JSV Check out the live demo with full source code.
To start developing web services with Service Stack we recommend starting with the ServiceStack.Examples project (includes ServiceStack.dlls):
If you already have ServiceStack and just want to download the latest release binaries get them at:
Alternatively if you want keep up with the latest version you can always use the power of Git :)
git clone git://github.com/mythz/ServiceStack.git
Online tutorials that walks you through developing and calling web services is available here:
Developed in the modern age, Service Stack provides an alternate, cleaner POCO-driven way of creating web services, featuring:
Unlike other web services frameworks ServiceStack let's you develop web services using strongly-typed models and DTO's. This lets ServiceStack and other tools to have a greater intelligence about your services allowing:
- Multiple serialization formats (JSON, XML, JSV and SOAP with extensible plugin model for more)
- A single re-usable C# Generic Client (In JSON, JSV, XML and SOAP flavours) that can talk to all your services.
- Re-use your Web Service DTOs (i.e. no code-gen) on your client applications so you're never out-of-sync
- Automatic serialization of Exceptions in your DTOs ResponseStatus
- The possibility of a base class for all your services to put high-level application logic (i.e security, logging, etc)
- Highly testable, your in-memory unit tests for your service can also be used as integration tests
- Built-in rolling web service error logging (if Redis is Configured in your AppHost)
- Rich REST and HTML support on all web services with x-www-form-urlencoded & multipart/form-data (i.e. FORM posts and file uploads)
Service Stack was designed with a top-down view, i.e. we identified the minimum amount of effort required to implement a web service and ensured it remained that way.
What are the minimum number or artefacts required to implement a web service? From our point of view it is the Request
and Response
DTO's (which on their own define the web service contract or interface) and the actual implementation of the web service which would take in a Request
and in most cases return the Response
. As it turns out these remain the only classes required to create a functional web service in Service Stack.
The Request and Response DTO's are standard DataContract
POCO's while the implementation just needs to inherit from a testable and dependency-free IService<TRequestDto>
. As a bonus for keeping your DTO's in a separate dependency-free .dll, you're able to re-use them in your C#/.NET clients providing a strongly-typed API without any code-gen what-so-ever. Also your DTO's define everything Service Stack does not pollute your web services with any additional custom artefacts or markup.
Service Stack re-uses the custom artefacts above and with zero-config and without imposing any extra burden on the developer adds discover-ability and provides hosting of your web service on a number of different physical end-points which as of today includes: XML (+REST), JSON (+REST), JSV (+REST) and SOAP 1.1 / SOAP 1.2.
Your application logic should not be tied to a third party vendor's web service host platform. In Service Stack they're not, your web service implementations are host and end-point ignorant, dependency-free and can be unit-tested independently of ASP.NET, Service Stack or its IOC.
Without any code changes unit tests written can be re-used and run as integration tests simply by switching the IServiceClient used to point to a configured end-point host.
Configured to auto-wire all of your web services with your registered dependencies. Funq was chosen for it's high-performance, low footprint and intuitive full-featured minimalistic API.
Entire POCO types are used to define the request and response DTO's to promote the creation well-defined coarse-grained web services. Message-based interfaces are best-practices when dealing with out-of-process calls as they are can batch more work using less network calls and are ultimately more re-usable as the same operation can be called using different calling semantics. This is in stark contrast to WCF's Operation or Service contracts which encourage RPC-style, application-specific web services by using method signatures to define each operation.
As it stands in general-purpose computing today, there is nothing more expensive you can do than a remote network call. Although easier for the newbie developer, by using methods to define web service operations, WCF is promoting bad-practices by encouraging them to design and treat web-service calls like normal function calls even though they are millions of times slower. Especially at the app-server tier, nothing hurts performance and scalability of your client and server than multiple dependent and synchronous web service calls.
Batch-full, message-based web services are ideally suited in development of SOA services as they result in fewer, richer and more re-usable web services that need to be maintained. RPC-style services normally manifest themselves from a client perspective that is the result of the requirements of a single applications data access scenario. Single applications come and go over time while your data and services are poised to hang around for the longer term. Ideally you want to think about the definition of your web service from a services and data perspective and how you can expose your data so it is more re-usable by a number of your clients.
With Mono on Linux now reaching full-maturity, Service Stack runs on .NET or Linux with Mono and can either be hosted inside an ASP.NET Web Application, Windows service or Console application running in or independently of a Web Server.
No coupling between the transport's endpoint and your web service's payload. You can re-use your existing strongly-typed web service DTO's with any .NET client using the available Soap, Xml and Json Service Clients - giving you a strongly-typed API while at the same time avoiding the need for any generated code.
- The most popular web service endpoints are configured by default. With no extra effort, each new web service created is immediately available and discoverable on the following end points:
- View the Service Stack endpoints page for our recommendations on which endpoint to use and when.
Also included in ServiceStack are libraries that are useful in the development of high performance web services:
-
ServiceStack.Text - The home of ServiceStack's JSON and JSV text serializers, the fastest text serializers for .NET
- JsonSerializer - The fastest JSON Serializer for .NET. Over 3 times faster than other .NET JSON serialisers.
- TypeSerializer - The JSV-format, a fast, compact text serializer that is very resilient to schema changes and is:
- 3.5x quicker and 2.6x smaller than the .NET XML DataContractSerializer and
- 5.3x quicker and 1.3x smaller than the .NET JSON DataContractSerializer - view the detailed benchmarks
-
ServiceStack.Redis - An API complete C# Redis client with native support for persisting C# POCO objects.
- You can download the latest [RedisWindowsDownload Windows build for the Redis Server here].
- Redis Admin UI - An Ajax GUI admin tool to help visualize your Redis data.
-
OrmLite - A convention-based, configuration free lightweight ORM that uses attributes from DataAnnotations to infer the table schema. Currently supports both Sqlite and SqlServer.
-
Caching - A common interface for caching with providers for:
- Memcached
- In Memory Cache
- Redis
- Twitter: to get updates of ServiceStack, follow @demisbellot or @ServiceStack on twitter.
- Email any questions to demis.bellot@gmail.com
Service Stack is under continuous improvement and is always adding features that are useful for high-performance, scalable and resilient web service scenarios. This is the current road map but is open to change. If you have suggestions for new features or want to prioritize the existing ones below: [http://code.google.com/p/servicestack/issues/entry you can leave feedback here].
- Add an opt-in durable Message Queue service processing of [AsyncOneWay] requests (with In Memory, Redis and RabbitMQ implementations)
- Enable ProtoBuf.NET, TypeSerializer and CSV (for tabular datasets) web service endpoints
- Integrate the Spark View Engine and enable a HTML endpoint so web services can also return a HTML human-friendly view
- New REST web service endpoint developed in the 'Spirit of REST' with partitioning of GET / POST / PUT / DELETE requests and utilizing 'Accept mimetype' HTTP request header to determine the resulting content type.
- Code generated proxy classes for Objective-C, Java Script / Action Script (and Java or C++ if there's enough interest) clients.
- Develop a completely managed HTTP Web Service Host (at the moment looking at building on top of Kayak HTTP)
- Add support for 'Web Sockets' protocol
Similar Open source .NET projects for developing or accessing web services include:
-
Open Rasta - REST-ful web service framwork:
-
Rest Sharp - an open source REST client for .NET
For IIS 6.0-only web servers (i.e. without IIS 7 and compatibility-mode) IIS and ASP.NET requires mapping an extension in order to embed ServiceStack. You can use a default handled ASP.NET extension like *.ashx e.g.
<add path="servicestack.ashx" type="ServiceStack.WebHost.Endpoints.ServiceStackHttpHandlerFactory, ServiceStack" verb="*"/>
Which will change your urls will now look like:
http://localhost/servicestack.ashx/xml/syncreply/Hello?Name=World
Runs on both Mono and .NET 3.5. (Live preview hosted on Mono / CentOS)