fullstackhero's .NET Web API Boilerplate is a starting point for your next .NET 7 Clean Architecture Project
that incorporates the most essential packages and features your projects will ever need including out of the box Multi-Tenancy support. This project can save well over 200+ hours
of development time for your team.
As the name suggests, this is an API / Server Boilerplate. You can find other Client Boilerplates that consume this API under
@fullstackhero
handle.
- Find
Blazor WebAssembly Boilerplate
here - https://github.com/fullstackhero/blazor-wasm-boilerplate
Watch the Getting started video here
: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a1mWRLQf9hY
The goal of this repository is to provide a complete and feature-rich starting point for any .NET Developer / Team to kick-start their next major project using .NET 7 Web API. This also serves the purpose of learning advanced concepts and implementations such as Multitenancy, CQRS, Onion Architecture, Clean Coding standards, Cloud Deployments with Terraform to AWS, Docker Concepts, CICD Pipelines & Workflows
and so on.
- Built on .NET 7.0
- Follows Clean Architecture Principles
- Domain Driven Design
- Cloud Ready. Can be deployed to AWS Infrastructure as ECS Containers using Terraform!
- Docker-Compose File Examples
- Documented at fullstackhero.net
- Multi Tenancy Support with Finbuckle
- Create Tenants with Multi Database / Shared Database Support
- Activate / Deactivate Tenants on Demand
- Upgrade Subscription of Tenants - Add More Validity Months to each tenant!
- Supports MySQL, MSSQL, Oracle & PostgreSQL!
Click to See More!
- Uses Entity Framework Core as DB Abstraction
- Flexible Repository Pattern
- Dapper Integration for Optimal Performance
- Serilog Integration with various Sinks - File, SEQ, Kibana
- OpenAPI - Supports Client Service Generation
- Mapster Integration for Quicker Mapping
- API Versioning
- Response Caching - Distributed Caching + REDIS
- Fluent Validations
- Audit Logging
- Advanced User & Role Based Permission Management
- Code Analysis & StyleCop Integration with Rulesets
- JSON Based Localization with Caching
- Hangfire Support - Secured Dashboard
- File Storage Service
- Test Projects
- JWT & Azure AD Authentication
- MediatR - CQRS
- SignalR Notifications
- & Much More
Read Documentation related to this Boilerplate here - https://fullstackhero.net/dotnet-webapi-boilerplate/
Feel free to contribute to the Documentation Repository - https://github.com/fullstackhero/docs
To get started with this Boilerplate, here are the available options.
- Install using the
FSH CLI
tool. Use this for release versions of the Boilerplate only. - Fork the Repository. Use this if you want to always keep your version of the Boilerplate up-to date with the latest changes.
Make sure that your DEV enviroment is setup, Read the Development Environment Guide
Before creating your first fullstackhero solution, you should ensure that your local machine has:
After you have installed .NET, you will need to install the fsh
console tool.
dotnet tool install --global FSH.CLI
fsh install
This isntall the FSH CLI tools and the associated Templates. You are now ready to create your first FSH project!
Here's how you would create a Solution using the FSH .NET WebAPI Boilerplate.
Simply navigate to a new directory (wherever you want to place your new solution), and open up Command Prompt at the opened directory.
Run the following command. Note that, in this demonstration, I am naming my new solution as FSH.Starter.
fsh api new FSH.Starter
OR
fsh api n FSH.Starter
This will create a new .NET 7 WEBAPI solution for you using the FSH Templates. For further steps and details, Read the Getting Started Guide
To update the tool & templates, run the following commands
dotnet tool update FSH.CLI --global
fsh update
You would probably need to take this approach if you want to keep your source code upto date with the latest changes. To get started based on this repository, you need to get a copy locally. You have three options: fork, clone, or download.
- Make a fork of this repository in your Github account.
- Create your new
dotnet-webapi-boilerplate
personal project by cloning the forked repository on your personal github. - Setup an upstream remote on your personal project pointing to your forked repository using command
git remote add upstream https://github.com/{githubuseraccount}/dotnet-webapi-boilerplate
andgit remote set-url --push upstream DISABLE
For step by step instructions, follow this and this.
So, for a better developer experience, I have added Makefile into the solution. Now that our solution is generated, let's navigate to the root folder of the solution and open up a command terminal.
To build the solution,
make build
By default, the solution is configured to work with postgresql database (mainly because of hte OS licensing). So, you will have to make sure that postgresql database instance is up and running on your machine. You can modify the connection string to include your username and password. Connections strings can be found at src/Host/Configurations/database.json
and src/Host/Configurations/hangfire.json
. Once that's done, let's start up the API server.
make start
That's it, the application would connect to the defined postgresql database and start creating tables, and seed required data.
For testing this API, we have 3 options.
- Swagger @
localhost:5001/swagger
- Postman collections are available
./postman
- ThunderClient for VSCode. This is my personal favorite. You will have to install the Thunderclient extension for VSCode.
The default credentials to this API is:
{
"email":"admin@root.com",
"password":"123Pa$$word!"
}
Open up Postman, Thunderclient or Swagger.
identity -> get-token
This is a POST Request. Here the body of the request will be the JSON (credentials) I specified earlier. And also, remember to pass the tenant id in the header of the request. The default tenant id is root
.
Here is a sample CURL command for getting the tokens.
curl -X POST \
'https://localhost:5001/api/tokens' \
--header 'Accept: */*' \
--header 'tenant: root' \
--header 'Accept-Language: en-US' \
--header 'Content-Type: application/json' \
--data-raw '{
"email": "admin@root.com",
"password": "123Pa$$word!"
}'
And here is the response.
{
"token": "eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.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.VYNaNvk2T4YDvQ3wriXgk2W_Vy9zyEEhjveNauNAeJY",
"refreshToken": "pyxO30zJK8KelpEXF0vPfbSbjntdlbbnxrZAlUFXfyE=",
"refreshTokenExpiryTime": "2023-04-15T07:15:33.5187598Z"
}
You will need to pass the token
in the request headers to authenticate calls to the fullstackhero API!
For further steps and details, Read the Getting Started Guide
The API project, being .NET 7, it is configured to have built-in support for containerization. That means, you really don't need a Dockerfile to containerize the webapi.
To build a docker image, all you have to do is, ensure that docker-desktop or docker instance is running. And run the following command at the root of the solution.
make publish
You can also push the docker image directly to dockerhub or any supported registry by using the following command.
make publish-to-hub
You will have to update your docker registry / repo url in the Makefile though!.
This project also comes with examples of docker compose files, where you can spin up the webapi and database isntance in your local containers with the following commands.
make dcu #docker compose up - Boots up the webapi & postgresql container
make dcd #docker compose down - Shuts down the webapi & postgresql containers
There are also examples for mysql & mssql variations of the fsh webapi. You can find the other docker-compose files under the ./docker-compose folder. Read more about fullstackhero's docker-compose instructions & files here
This is something you wont get to see very often with boilerplates. But, we do support cloud deployment to AWS using terraform. The terraform files are available at the ./terraform
folder.
- Install Terraform
- Install & Configure AWS CLI profiles to allow terraform to provision resources for you. I have made a video about AWS Credentials Management.
In brief, the terraform folder has 2 sub-folders.
- backend
- environments/staging
The Backend folder is internally used by Terraform for state management and locking. There is a one-time setup you have to do against this folder. Navigate to the backend folder and run the command.
terraform init
terraform apply -auto-approve
This would create the required S3 Buckets and DDB table for you.
Next is the environments/staging
folder. Here too, run the following command.
terraform init
Once done, you can go the terraform.tfvars file to change the variables like,
- project tags
- docker image name
- ecs cluster name and so on.
After that, simply back to the root of the solution and run the following command.
make ta
This will evaluate your terraform files and create a provision plan for you. Once you are ok, type in yes
and the tool will start to deploy your .NET WebAPI project as containers along with a RDS PostgreSQL intance. You will be receiving the hosted api url once the provisioning is completed!
To destroy the deployed resources, run the following
make td
Overview - Read
Getting Started - Read
Development Environment - Learn about setting up the DEV environment
Participate in Discussions - QNA & General Discussions
Join our Discord - fullstackhero @ Discord
- Discord @fullstackhero
- Facebook Page @codewithmukesh
- Youtube Channel @codewithmukesh
This project is licensed with the MIT license.
Has this Project helped you learn something New? or Helped you at work? Here are a few ways by which you can support.
- Leave a star! ⭐
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- Or, consider buying me a coffee! ☕
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