ISBN-13: 9781118794753 / Angielski / Miękka / 2014 / 624 str.
ISBN-13: 9781118794753 / Angielski / Miękka / 2014 / 624 str.
ASP.NET MVC insiders cover the latest updates to the technology in this popular Wrox reference MVC 5 is the newest update to the popular Microsoft technology that enables you to build dynamic, data-driven websites. Like previous versions, this guide shows you step-by-step techniques on using MVC to best advantage, with plenty of practical tutorials to illustrate the concepts. It covers controllers, views, and models; forms and HTML helpers; data annotation and validation; membership, authorization, and security.
FOREWORD xxvii
INTRODUCTION xxix
CHAPTER 1: GETTING STARTED 1
A Quick Introduction to ASP.NET MVC 1
How ASP.NET MVC Fits in with ASP.NET 2
The MVC Pattern 2
MVC as Applied to Web Frameworks 3
The Road to MVC 5 3
MVC 4 Overview 6
Open–Source Release 10
ASP.NET MVC 5 Overview 11
One ASP.NET 11
New Web Project Experience 12
ASP.NET Identity 12
Bootstrap Templates 13
Attribute Routing 14
ASP.NET Scaffolding 14
Authentication Filters 15
Filter Overrides 15
Installing MVC 5 and Creating Applications 16
Software Requirements for ASP.NET MVC 5 16
Installing ASP.NET MVC 5 16
Creating an ASP.NET MVC 5 Application 17
The New ASP.NET Project Dialog 18
The MVC Application Structure 24
ASP.NET MVC and Conventions 27
Convention over Configuration 28
Conventions Simplify Communication 29
Summary 29
CHAPTER 2: CONTROLLERS 31
The Controller’s Role 31
A Sample Application: The MVC Music Store 34
Controller Basics 38
A Simple Example: The Home Controller 39
Writing Your First Controller 42
Parameters in Controller Actions 45
Summary 47
CHAPTER 3: VIEWS 49
The Purpose of Views 50
View Basics 50
Understanding View Conventions 54
Strongly Typed Views 55
How ViewBag Falls Short 55
Understanding ViewBag, ViewData, and ViewDataDictionary 57
View Models 58
Adding a View 60
The Razor View Engine 63
What Is Razor? 63
Code Expressions 64
HTML Encoding 66
Code Blocks 68
Razor Syntax Samples 68
Layouts 70
ViewStart 72
Specifying a Partial View 73
Summary 74
CHAPTER 4: MODELS 75
Modeling the Music Store 76
Scaffolding a Store Manager 80
What Is Scaffolding? 80
Scaffolding and the Entity Framework 82
Executing the Scaffolding Template 85
Executing the Scaffolded Code 92
Editing an Album 97
Building a Resource to Edit an Album 97
Responding to the Edit POST Request 101
Model Binding 103
The DefaultModelBinder 104
Explicit Model Binding 105
Summary 107
CHAPTER 5: FORMS AND HTML HELPERS 109
Using Forms 110
The Action and the Method 110
To GET or to POST? 111
HTML Helpers 114
Automatic Encoding 115
Making Helpers Do Your Bidding 115
Inside HTML Helpers 116
Setting Up the Album Edit Form 117
Adding Inputs 118
Helpers, Models, and View Data 124
Strongly Typed Helpers 126
Helpers and Model Metadata 127
Templated Helpers 127
Helpers and ModelState 128
Other Input Helpers 129
Html.Hidden 129
Html.Password 129
Html.RadioButton 129
Html.CheckBox 130
Rendering Helpers 130
Html.ActionLink and Html.RouteLink 131
URL Helpers 132
Html.Partial and Html.RenderPartial 133
Html.Action and Html.RenderAction 133
Summary 135
CHAPTER 6: DATA ANNOTATIONS AND VALIDATION 137
Annotating Orders for Validation 138
Using Validation Annotations 141
Custom Error Messages and Localization 146
Looking Behind the Annotation Curtain 147
Controller Actions and Validation Errors 148
Custom Validation Logic 150
Custom Annotations 150
IValidatableObject 154
Display and Edit Annotations 155
Display 155
ScaffoldColumn 156
DisplayFormat 156
ReadOnly 157
DataType 157
UIHint 158
HiddenInput 158
Summary 158
CHAPTER 7: MEMBERSHIP, AUTHORIZATION, AND SECURITY 159
Security: Not fun, But Incredibly Important 159
Using the Authorize Attribute to Require Login 162
Securing Controller Actions 162
How AuthorizeAttribute Works with Forms Authentication and the AccountController 167
Windows Authentication 169
Using AuthorizeAttribute to Require Role Membership 172
Extending User Identity 174
Storing additional user profile data 174
Persistance control 174
Managing users and roles 175
External Login via OAuth and OpenID 175
Registering External Login Providers 176
Configuring OpenID Providers 178
Configuring OAuth Providers 180
Security Implications of External Logins 181
Understanding the Security Vectors in a Web Application 182
Threat: Cross–Site Scripting 183
Threat: Cross–Site Request Forgery 193
Threat: Cookie Stealing 197
Threat: Over–Posting 200
Threat: Open Redirection 202
Proper Error Reporting and the Stack Trace 207
Using Configuration Transforms 208
Using Retail Deployment Configuration in Production 209
Using a Dedicated Error Logging System 209
Security Recap and Helpful Resources 209
Summary 211
CHAPTER 8: AJAX 213
jQuery 214
jQuery Features 214
Unobtrusive JavaScript 218
Using jQuery 219
Ajax Helpers 225
Adding the Unobtrusive Ajax Script to Your Project 225
Ajax ActionLinks 226
HTML 5 Attributes 230
Ajax Forms 230
Client Validation 233
jQuery Validation 233
Custom Validation 236
Beyond Helpers 241
jQuery UI 242
Autocomplete with jQuery UI 243
JSON and Client–Side Templates 246
Bootstrap Plugins 251
Improving Ajax Performance 253
Using Content Delivery Networks 253
Script Optimizations 253
Bundling and Minification 254
Summary 255
CHAPTER 9: ROUTING 257
Uniform Resource Locators 258
Introduction to Routing 259
Comparing Routing to URL Rewriting 259
Routing Approaches 260
Defining Attribute Routes 260
Defining Traditional Routes 271
Choosing Attribute Routes or Traditional Routes 280
Named Routes 280
MVC Areas 282
Catch–All Parameter 284
Multiple Route Parameters in a Segment 285
StopRoutingHandler and IgnoreRoute 286
Debugging Routes 286
Inside Routing: How Routes Generate URLs 288
High–Level View of URL Generation 288
A Detailed Look at URL Generation 289
Ambient Route Values 291
More Examples of URL Generation with the Route Class 293
Inside Routing: How Routes Tie Your URL to an Action 294
The High–Level Request Routing Pipeline 294
RouteData 295
Custom Route Constraints 295
Using Routing with Web Forms 296
Summary 297
CHAPTER 10: NUGET 299
Introduction to NuGet 299
Adding a Library as a Package 301
Finding Packages 301
Installing a Package 303
Updating a Package 308
Package Restore 308
Using the Package Manager Console 309
Creating Packages 312
Packaging a Project 313
Packaging a Folder 313
Configuration File and Source Code Transformations 314
NuSpec File 315
Metadata 316
Dependencies 317
Specifying Files to Include 318
Tools 319
Framework and Profile Targeting 322
Prerelease Packages 324
Publishing Packages 325
Publishing to NuGet.org 325
Using NuGet.exe 327
Using the Package Explorer 330
Summary 332
CHAPTER 11: ASP.NET WEB API 333
Defining ASP.NET Web API 334
Getting Started with Web API 335
Writing an API Controller 335
Examining the Sample ValuesController 335
Async by Design: IHttpController 336
Incoming Action Parameters 340
Action Return Values, Errors, and Asynchrony 340
Configuring Web API 342
Configuration in Web–Hosted Web API 343
Configuration in Self–Hosted Web API 343
Adding Routes to Your Web API 346
Binding Parameters 347
Filtering Requests 349
Enabling Dependency Injection 350
Exploring APIs Programmatically 350
Tracing the Application 352
Web API Example: ProductsController 352
Summary 354
CHAPTER 12: SINGLE PAGE APPLICATIONS WITH ANGULARJS 355
Understanding and Setting Up AngularJS 356
What’s AngularJS? 356
Your Goal in This Chapter 356
Getting Started 357
Adding AngularJS to the Site 359
Setting Up the Database 361
Building the Web API 363
Building Applications and Modules 364
Creating Controllers, Models, and Views 365
Services 368
Routing 371
Details View 373
A Custom MovieService 375
Deleting Movies 377
Editing and Creating Movies 379
Summary 384
CHAPTER 13: DEPENDENCY INJECTION 385
Software Design Patterns 385
Design Pattern: Inversion of Control 386
Design Pattern: Service Locator 388
Design Pattern: Dependency Injection 392
Dependency Resolution in MVC 395
Singly Registered Services in MVC 397
Multiply Registered Services in MVC 397
Arbitrary Objects in MVC 399
Dependency Resolution in Web API 402
Singly Registered Services in Web API 402
Multiply Registered Services in Web API 403
Arbitrary Objects in Web API 405
Dependency Resolvers in MVC vs. Web API 405
Summary 405
CHAPTER 14: UNIT TESTING 407
Understanding Unit Testing and Test–Driven Development 408
Defining Unit Testing 408
Defining Test–Driven Development 410
Building a Unit Test Project 412
Examining the Default Unit Tests 413
Test Only the Code You Write 415
Advice for Unit Testing Your ASP.NET MVC
and ASP.NET Web API Applications 415
Testing Controllers 416
Testing Routes 420
Testing Validators 423
Summary 427
CHAPTER 15: EXTENDING MVC 429
Extending Models 430
Turning Request Data into Models 430
Describing Models with Metadata 436
Validating Models 438
Extending Views 442
Customizing View Engines 442
Writing HTML Helpers 444
Writing Razor Helpers 445
Extending Controllers 446
Selecting Actions 446
Filters 447
Providing Custom Results 457
Summary 458
CHAPTER 16: ADVANCED TOPICS 461
Mobile Support 461
Adaptive Rendering 462
Display Modes 470
Advanced Razor 473
Templated Razor Delegates 473
Advanced View Engines 476
Configuring a View Engine 477
Finding a View 478
The View Itself 479
Alternative View Engines 480
New View Engine or New ActionResult? 482
Advanced Scaffolding 482
Introducing ASP.NET Scaffolding 482
Customizing Scaffold Templates 483
Custom Scaffolders 485
Advanced Routing 486
RouteMagic 486
Editable Routes 487
Advanced Templates 492
The Default Templates 492
Custom Templates 496
Advanced Controllers 498
Defining the Controller: The IController Interface 498
The ControllerBase Abstract Base Class 499
The Controller Class and Actions 500
Action Methods 502
The ActionResult 502
Action Invoker 511
Using Asynchronous Controller Actions 515
Summary 520
CHAPTER 17: REAL–WORLD ASP.NET MVC: BUILDING THE NUGET.ORG WEBSITE 521
May the Source Be with You 522
WebActivator 526
ASP.NET Dynamic Data 527
Exception Logging 530
Profiling 532
Data Access 535
EF Code–Based Migrations 536
Deployments with Octopus Deploy 539
Automated Browser Testing with Fluent Automation 540
Other Useful NuGet Packages 541
WebBackgrounder 541
Lucene.NET 542
AnglicanGeek.MarkdownMailer 543
Ninject 543
Summary 544
APPENDIX: ASP.NET MVC 5.1 545
ASP.NET MVC 5.1 Release Description 545
Getting MVC 5.1 546
Upgrading MVC 5 Projects from MVC 5.1 546
Upgrading an MVC 5 Application to 5.1 547
Enum Support in ASP.NET MVC Views 549
Attribute Routing with Custom Constraints 553
Route Constraints in Attribute Routing 554
ASP.NET MVC 5.1 Example: Adding a Custom LocaleRoute 554
Bootstrap and JavaScript Enhancements 558
EditorFor Now Supports Passing HTML Attributes 558
Client–Side Validation for MinLength and MaxLength 561
Three Small but Useful Fixes to MVC Ajax Support 562
Summary 563
INDEX 565
Jon Galloway works at Microsoft as a Technical Evangelist focused on ASP.NET MVC.
Brad Wilson has been a professional software developer for more than 20 years, with 10 years in web development.
K. Scott Allen is the founder of OdeToCode LLC, which provides custom development, consulting, and mentoring services for clients worldwide.
David Matson is a software developer at Microsoft. He is part of the MVC 5 and Web API 2 product team.
Build dynamic, data–driven websites with MVC 5
MVC 5 is the latest update to Microsoft’s popular MVC (Model–View–Controller) technology—an established web application framework that enables fast, TDD–friendly development. MVC allows developers to build dynamic, data–driven websites with sophisticated features, such as single page applications, mobile optimization, adaptive rendering, and more. Updated to cover new post–release features in MVC 5.1 and 5.2, this book offers step–by–step techniques to use MVC to its full advantage. Written by top ASP.NET MVC experts at Microsoft, along with visionaries in the field, the book’s practical tutorials reinforce concepts and allow developers to create their own applications.
Professional ASP.NET MVC 5:
Wrox Professional guides are planned and written by working programmers to meet the real–world needs of programmers, developers, and IT professionals. Focused and relevant, they address the issues technology professionals face every day. They provide examples, practical solutions, and expert education in new technologies, all designed to help programmers do a better job.
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