The ASP.NET Route Versions-library was built after I was being inspired by a discussion with a colleague and reading the great article Your API versioning is wrong by Troy Hunt, where he concludes that you don't need a war of preferences between different ways of versioning your API, you can actually support multiple ways in the same API.
In his article, Troy lists 3 ways (to do it wrong), which I have implemented for ASP.NET Core, and added support for one more way, which is URL versioning. This library supports the following ways to version your API:
- URL versioning
- Query string versioning
- Custom request header
- Content type
URL versioning:
HTTP GET:
https://my-web-app.com/api/v2/customers
Query string versioning:
HTTP GET:
https://my-web-app.com/api/customers?api-version=2
Custom request header:
HTTP GET:
https://my-web-app.com/api/customers
api-version: 2
Content type:
HTTP GET:
https://my-web-app.com/api/customers
Accept: application/vnd.api-version.v2+json
All you need to do is use the [RouteVersion]
-attribute on the Controller-Actions you want to version and provide the route-version as argument:
[Route("api/v{api-version}/[controller]")]
[Route("api/[controller]")]
[ApiController]
public class CustomersController : ControllerBase
{
[HttpGet]
[RouteVersion(1)]
public ActionResult<string> GetV1()
{
return "Get Customers Version 1";
}
[HttpGet]
[RouteVersion(2)]
public ActionResult<string> GetV2()
{
return "Get Customers Version 2";
}
[HttpPost]
[RouteVersion(1)]
public ActionResult<string> PostV1()
{
return "Post Customers Version 1";
}
[HttpPost]
[RouteVersion(2)]
public ActionResult<string> PostV2()
{
return "Post Customers Version 2";
}
}
The attribute will only resolve versioning between Controller-Actions, everything else is handled by the regular ASP.NET Core routing, and behave as you're used to.
In your Startup.cs
you can configure what ways of API-versioning you want to support (all activated by default). You can also change the keys of the routing, query string, custom header and content type.
public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
services.ConfigureRouteVersions(options =>
{
options.UseRoute = true;
options.UseQuery = true;
options.UseCustomHeader = true;
options.UseAcceptHeader = true;
// Set route-name in template used. For example: "api/v{version}/[controller]"
// Default: "api-version"
options.RouteKey = "version";
// Set query string-key used. For example: "/api/customers?v=1"
// Default: "api-version"
options.QueryKey = "v"; // To use: '/api/customers?v=1'
// Set custom version header used. For example: "my-app-api-version"
// Default: "api-version"
options.CustomHeaderKey = "my-app-api-version";
// Set Accept-header vendor used. For example: "application/vnd.my-custom-api-header.v1+json"
// Default: "application/vnd.api-version.v1+json"
options.SetAcceptHeader("my-custom-api-header");
// Set Accept-header regex-pattern. For example: "application/pre.my-custom-vendor-api.v1+json"
options.AcceptRegexPattern = @"application\/pre\.my-custom-vendor-api\.v([\d]+)\+json";
});
services.AddMvc();
}
If you know that your new version of an API-endpoint is compatible with previous version, and if you want to support it, you can use the IsDefault
-parameter with the [RouteVersion]
-attribute. For example, if you've just added new fields to the next version and you find that is compatible enough to be the default version of the API-endpoint:
[Route("api/[controller]")]
[ApiController]
public class CustomersController : ControllerBase
{
[HttpGet]
[RouteVersion(1)]
public ActionResult<string> GetV1()
{
return "Get Customers Version 1";
}
[HttpGet]
[RouteVersion(2, IsDefault = true)]
public ActionResult<string> GetV2()
{
return "Get Customers Version 2";
}
}
Then you can make a call to the URL for the API-endpoint without specifying the version and get the default version, which in this example is v2:
HTTP GET:
https://my-web-app.com/api/customers/
> "Get Customers Version 2"
You can find the source code on GitHub, the newest unstable build on MyGet and the latest version of the library on NuGet