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WebApi Starter Template

The WebApi Starter Template is a .NET 6.0 Web Api solution template. It uses a service named Weather Forecast as an example.

The template is structured according to layered architecture. The repository is designed as a mono-repo, where other sibling solutions could co-exist.

Disclaimer: The WebApi Starter Template is opinionated. And it also evolves as I learn and gain experience. I keep adding features that I see essential for a typical new Web Api solution.

Features

The following is the list of features in the template.

1. Mono-repo folder structure

The repository is structured to allow for multiple solutions, each in its own folder. The WebApi Starter Template is in the weather-forecast folder under the root level. There is another solution in this repo, named common-packages. It produces class libraries that are needed by the WebApi Starter Template. More on this below.

2. Layered architecture

The Weather Forecast solution is composed of a hierarchy of folders and projects that manifests layered architecture. The hierarchy is as follows:

  • 0.CompositionRoot: Not specific to the architecture, but contains the Host project, which acts as the composition root of the application.
  • 1.Presentation: Contains projects pertaining to the presentation layer, such as Api and Api.ViewModels.
  • 2.Infrastructure: Contains projects for data access, either persistence or access to upstream data providers. Both are parts of the infrastructure layer in a typical layered architecture.

    Presentation and infrastructure are the two tenants of the outermost layer of layered architecture. So, to be precise, each of them is only half layer. Being two halves of the same layer does not mean that they could have a direct dependency on one another.

  • 3.Application: Contains projects in the application layer.
  • 4.Domain: Contains projects in the domain layer. This is the innermost layer of the architecture, and the most protected and purest one.

3. Separate Contracts projects and strict dependency policy

Layered architecture constrains the direction of dependency between projects. It states that dependency should always point inwards. Additionally, the WebApi Starter Template applies more constraints to dependencies between projects, as described below:

  1. Any interface (C# interface) or model (a data-centric C# record, class, or struct, with no behavior) that is to be shared between two projects must be defined in a Contracts project. Contract projects are lightweight projects that have a .Contracts suffix in their names. They only contain declaration of behavior together with any required supporting data types (parameters and return types). They don't contain implementations, nor do they contain domain entities with encapsulated behavior.

  2. When a project depends on another in the next inner layer, a Contracts project must be created in the inner layer to define the interfaces and models. The implementation of the defined contracts could either be in the outer or the inner layer, depending on the case. For example, when the Api project has a dependency on the Application layer, both the contract and the implementation projects should be on the application layer side. Another example is when the application layer has a dependency on the infrastructure layer. In this case, the application layer should define the contract, and the infrastructure layer should hold the implementation. This is why Persistence.Contracts is in the application layer.

  3. Dependencies on implementation projects are disallowed. A dependency between any two projects in the solution must be a dependency on a contracts project. This is a hard rule in this template, with only two exceptions:

    • The dependency of the Api project on the Api.ViewModels project. While view models are contracts in a sense, the ViewModels name is used instead because it highlights its peripheral and public characteristics.

    • Dependencies defined in the Host project, which is the application's composition root, therefore, it has to wire all the assemblies together, including the implementation ones.

4. Composition Root

The default Web Api project created by the .NET project templates serves two purposes; holding the Main method, which is the entry to the application, and holding the Controller classes. The downside of this is that it means that this project should then have references to all the other assemblies in the application, either directly or indirectly. Unfortunately, this exposes implementation projects, such as that for the data access layer, as well as inner domain entities, to the Controller classes. Even the proponents of layered architecture seem to accept this violation because it is somewhat expensive to avoid. In the WebApi Starter Template, this violation is eliminated in order to keep a pure layered architecture. The traditional Api project is split into two: Host, which contains the Main method, and Api, which contains the Controller classes. The concept of Application Parts is used to enable the discovery of controllers. Only the Host project is allowed to have references to each and every assembly in the solution. On the other hand, the controllers in the Api project should only have access to Api.ViewModels and any required Contracts project defined in the application layer.

5. Directory.Build.Props

The solution employs a Directory.Build.Props file that defines all the common properties for projects. The importance of this approach is that it eliminates code duplication on the individual project level and ensures a uniform configuration. In fact, the props file is put in the repo's root folder, which means that it is applicable to all solutions in the repo. The following configurations are enforced by the props file.

  • .NET 6.0 target framework.
  • Enabled nullable reference types.
  • Enabled implicit using.

There are other features that are also configured in the Directory.Build.Props file. Those are listed below as separate items due to their significance.

6. Root namespace and assembly name

Root namespace and assembly name are both equal to Company.Product.{SolutionName}.{ProjectName}. Replace Company.Product with your own value in the Directory.Build.Props file. All projects will inherit these settings. Consider this behavior when naming your solutions and projects, as the names will end up being part of the root namespace and the assembly name.

7. Dynamic dependency injection

In many ASP.NET projects, services are registered, one by one, in the default .NET dependency injection container. This has two disadvantages. First, this clutters the Startup.cs or Program.cs files of your Api project. Second, in order for this to work, the Api project must have full visibility on each and every project in the solution, regardless of where it is within the layers of the architecture. Some developers try to remove the clutter by grouping those registrations into separate static methods, with each of these methods defined in the project where the corresponding implementations are. This solves the cluttering problem but not the violation to layered architecture. Moreover, in order for this to work, each project should start to have a reference to the Microsoft NuGet package where IServiceCollection and its extension methods are defined, otherwise calls like services.AddSingleton() won't work in these projects. This creates a tight coupling between core projects and a specific IoC provider, which is not good, in my opinion.

The WebApi Starter Template takes a completely different approach to populate the DI container, mainly through assembly scanning and attribute-based registration:

  1. Services are discovered through assembly scanning. Any assembly that starts with Company.Portal.SolutionName will be automatically scanned. In Program.cs, a call to the extension method ConfigureContainerDynamically(), which is defined in the Common/DependencyInjection project, enables assembly scanning and dynamic registration.
  2. Scanned assemblies will be searched for classes that are decorated by a RegisterType attribute. This attribute is to be used in order to provide the type registration information. For example, a Repository class that is decorated by [RegisterType(Lifetime.Scoped, typeof(IRepository))] declares itself as an implementation for the IRepository interface and requires to be registered as a Scoped service.

This approach is much cleaner in my opinion. Not only does it overcome the two disadvantages mentioned above for traditional DI registration, but it also moves the declaration of registration parameters (i.e. types and lifetime) to where they should be; inside the implemented service. This makes those parameters more visible to the developers.

Template personalization

When using the WebApi Starter Template to create a new solution, the following should be done before it is ready for use.

  1. Replace the value for Company.Product in Directory.Build.Props.
  2. Rename the main solution folder ./weather-forecast.
  3. Rename the solution file ./weather-forecast/WeatherForecast.sln.
  4. All namespace using statements that start with Company.Product.Common and Company.Product.WeatherForecast in both solutions should be replaced.
  5. Publish the DependencyInjection project as a nuget package, and replace the path-based references to it with its nuget package reference. The use of a path-based reference is only for simplicity and should not be used in production.

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A Web API .NET 6 solution template

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