Skip to content

Access HTTP specific features in services

Arxisos edited this page Feb 24, 2012 · 14 revisions

ServiceStack is based on http handlers, but ServiceStack provides a clean, dependency-free IService to implement your Web Services logic in. The philosophy behind this approach is that the less dependencies you have on your environment and its request context, the more testable and re-usable your services become.

Advantages for having dependency-free services

If you don't need to access the HTTP Request context there is nothing stopping you from having your same IService implementation processing requests from a message queue which we've done for internal projects (which incidentally is the motivation behind the asynconeway endpoint, to signal requests that are safe for deferred execution).

Injecting the IRequestContext into your Service

Although working in a clean-room can be ideal ideal from re-usability and testability point of view, you stand the chance of missing out a lot of the features present in HTTP.

Just like using built-in Funq IOC container, the way to tell ServiceStack to inject the request context is by implementing the IRequiresRequestContext interface which will get the IRequestContext inject before each request.

	public interface IRequestContext : IDisposable
	{
		T Get<T>() where T : class;
		string IpAddress { get; }
		IDictionary<string, Cookie> Cookies { get; }
		EndpointAttributes EndpointAttributes { get; }
		IRequestAttributes RequestAttributes { get; }
		string MimeType { get; }
		string CompressionType { get; }
		string AbsoluteUri { get; }
		IFile[] Files { get; }
	}

Note: ServiceBase and RestServiceBase already implement IRequestContext. You can access the IRequestContext with base.RequestContext in these two classes.

This will allow your services to inspect any Cookies or download any Files that were sent with the request, without creating a hard dependency.

Note: To set Response Cookies or Headers, return the HttpResult object.



  1. Getting Started
    1. Create your first webservice
    2. Your first webservice explained
    3. ServiceStack's new API Design
    4. Designing a REST-ful service with ServiceStack
    5. Example Projects Overview
  2. Reference
    1. Order of Operations
    2. The IoC container
    3. Metadata page
    4. Rest, SOAP & default endpoints
    5. SOAP support
    6. Routing
    7. Service return types
    8. Customize HTTP Responses
    9. Plugins
    10. Validation
    11. Error Handling
    12. Security
  3. Clients
    1. Overview
    2. C# client
    3. Silverlight client
    4. JavaScript client
    5. Dart Client
    6. MQ Clients
  4. Formats
    1. Overview
    2. JSON/JSV and XML
    3. ServiceStack's new HTML5 Report Format
    4. ServiceStack's new CSV Format
    5. MessagePack Format
    6. ProtoBuf Format
  5. View Engines 4. Razor & Markdown Razor
    1. Markdown Razor
  6. Hosts
    1. IIS
    2. Self-hosting
    3. Mono
  7. Advanced
    1. Configuration options
    2. Access HTTP specific features in services
    3. Logging
    4. Serialization/deserialization
    5. Request/response filters
    6. Filter attributes
    7. Concurrency Model
    8. Built-in caching options
    9. Built-in profiling
    10. Messaging and Redis
    11. Form Hijacking Prevention
    12. Auto-Mapping
    13. HTTP Utils
    14. Virtual File System
    15. Config API
    16. Physical Project Structure
    17. Modularizing Services
  8. Plugins
    1. Sessions
    2. Authentication/authorization
    3. Request logger
    4. Swagger API
  9. Tests
    1. Testing
    2. HowTo write unit/integration tests
  10. Other Languages
    1. FSharp
    2. VB.NET
  11. Use Cases
    1. Single Page Apps
    2. Azure
    3. Logging
    4. Bundling and Minification
    5. NHibernate
  12. Performance
    1. Real world performance
  13. How To
    1. Sending stream to ServiceStack
    2. Setting UserAgent in ServiceStack JsonServiceClient
    3. ServiceStack adding to allowed file extensions
    4. Default web service page how to
  14. Future
    1. Roadmap
Clone this wiki locally