| Clean code | ||
|---|---|---|
| .vscode | ||
| samples/HttpSend | ||
| src | ||
| test/CloudNative.CloudEvents.UnitTests | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| CloudEvents.sln | ||
| CloudEvents.sln.DotSettings | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| README.md | ||
| appveyor.yml | ||
		
			
				
				README.md
			
		
		
			
			
		
	
	sdk-csharp
.NET Standard 2.0 (C#) SDK for CloudEvents
The CloudNative.CloudEvents package provides utility methods and classes for creating, encoding, decoding, sending, and receiving CNCF CloudEvents.
CloudEvent
The CloudEvent class reflects the event envelope defined by the CNCF CloudEvents specification.
It supports versions 0.1, 0.2, and 0.3 of the CloudEvents specification.
The strongly typed API already reflects the 0.3 naming with backwards compatible property overrides
for 0.2 that are explicitly marked as obsolete.
The default specification version is 0.3, you can override this by specifying the version explicitly:
new CloudEvent(CloudEventsSpecVersion.V0_1). The SpecVersion property also allows the
version to be switched, meaning you can receive a 0.1 event, switch the version number, and forward
it as a 0.3 event.
| 0.1 | 0.2 | 0.3 | Property name | CLR type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| eventID | id | id | CloudEvent.Id | System.String | 
| eventType | type | type | CloudEvent.Type | System.String | 
| cloudEventsVersion | specversion | specversion | CloudEvent.SpecVersion | System.String | 
| eventTime | time | time | CloudEvent.Time | System.DateTime | 
| source | source | source | CloudEvent.Source | System.Uri | 
| - | - | subject | CloudEvent.Subject | System.String | 
| schemaUrl | schemaurl | schemaurl | CloudEvent.SchemaUrl | System.Uri | 
| contentType | contenttype | datacontenttype | CloudEvent.ContentType | System.Net.Mime.ContentType | 
| - | - | datacontentencoding | CloudEvent.DataContentEncoding | System.String | 
| data | data | data | CloudEvent.Data | System.Object | 
The CloudEvent.Data property is object typed, and may hold any valid serializable
CLR type. The following types have special handling:
- System.String: In binary content mode, strings are copied into the transport message payload body using UTF-8 encoding.
- System.Byte[]: In binary content mode, byte array content is copied into the message paylaod body without further transformation.
- System.Stream: In binary content mode, stream content is copied into the message paylaod body without further transformation.
Any other data type is transformed using the given event formatter for the operation or the JSON formatter by default before being added to the transport payload body.
All extension attributes can reached via the CloudEvent.GetAttributes() method,
which returns the internal attribute collection. The internal collection performs
all required validations.
If a CloudEvents-prefixed transport header, like an HTTP header, is string typed and the value is surrounded by '{' and '}' or '[' and ']', it is assumed to hold JSON content.
Extensions
CloudEvent extensions are represented by implementations of the ICloudEventExtension
interface. The SDK includes strongly typed implementations for all offical CloudEvents
extensions:
- DistributedTracingExtensionfor distributed tracing
- SampledRateExtensionfor sampled rate
- SequenceExtensionfor sequence
Extension classes provides type-safe access to the extension attributes, and implement the
required validations as well as type mappings. An extension object is always created as an
independent entity and is then attached to a CloudEvent instance. Once attached, the
extension object's attributes are merged into the CloudEvent instance.
This snippet shows how to create a CloudEvent with an extensions:
 var cloudEvent = new CloudEvent(
    "com.github.pull.create",
    new Uri("https://github.com/cloudevents/spec/pull/123"),
    new DistributedTracingExtension()
    {
        TraceParent = "value",
        TraceState = "value"
    })
{
    ContentType = new ContentType("application/json"),
    Data = "[]"
};
The extension can later be accessed via the Extension<T>() method:
 var s = cloudEvent.Extension<DistributedTracingExtension>().TraceParent
All APIs where a CloudEvent is constructed from an incoming event (or request or
response), allow for extension instances to be added to the respective methods, and
the extensions are invoked in the mapping process, for instance to extract information
from headers that deviate from the CloudEvents default mapping.
For instance, the server-side mapping for HttpRequestMessage allows adding
extensions like this:
public async Task<HttpResponseMessage> Run( HttpRequestMessage req, ILogger log)
{
    var cloudEvent = req.ToCloudEvent(new DistributedTracingExtension());
}
Transport Bindings
This SDK helps with mapping CloudEvents from and to messages or transport frames of popular .NET clients, but without getting in the way of your application's choices of whether you want to send an event via HTTP PUT or POST or how you want to handle settlement of transfers in AMQP or MQTT. The transport binding classes and extensions therefore don't wrap the send and receive operations; you still use the native API of the respective library.
HTTP - System.Net.Http.HttpClient
The .NET HttpClient uses
the HttpContent
abstraction to wrap payloads for sending requests that carry entity bodies.
This SDK provides a [CloudEventContent] class derived from HttpContent that can be
created from a CloudEvent instance, the desired ContentMode and an event formatter.
var cloudEvent = new CloudEvent("com.example.myevent", new Uri("urn:example-com:mysource"))
{
    ContentType = new ContentType(MediaTypeNames.Application.Json),
    Data = JsonConvert.SerializeObject("hey there!")
};
var content = new CloudEventContent( cloudEvent, 
                                     ContentMode.Structured, 
                                     new JsonEventFormatter());
var httpClient = new HttpClient();
var result = (await httpClient.PostAsync(this.Url, content));
For responses, HttpClient puts all custom headers onto the HttpResponseMessage rather
than on the carried HttpContent instance. Therefore, if an event is retrieved with
HttpClient, for instance from a queue-like structure, the CloudEvent is created from
the response message object rather than the content object using the ToCloudEvent()
extension method on HttpResponseMessage:
var httpClient = new HttpClient();
// delete and receive message from top of the queue
var result = await httpClient.DeleteAsync(new Uri("https://example.com/queue/messages/top"));
if (HttpStatusCode.OK == result.StatusCode) {
   var receivedCloudEvent = await result.ToCloudEvent();
}
HTTP - System.Net.HttpWebRequest
If your application uses the HttpWebRequest client, you can copy a CloudEvent into
the request structure in structured or binary mode:
HttpWebRequest httpWebRequest = WebRequest.CreateHttp("https://example.com/target");
httpWebRequest.Method = "POST";
await httpWebRequest.CopyFromAsync(cloudEvent, ContentMode.Structured, new JsonEventFormatter());
Mind that the Method property must be set to an HTTP method that allows an entity body
to be sent, otherwise the copy operation will fail.
HTTP - System.Net.HttpListener (HttpRequestMessage)
On the server-side, you can extract a CloudEvent from the server-side HttpRequestMessage
with the ToCloudEventAsync() extension. If your code handles HttpRequestContext,
you will use the Request property:
var cloudEvent = await context.Request.ToCloudEventAsync();
If you use a functions framework that lets you handle HttpResponseMessage and return
HttpResponseMessage, you will call the extension on the request object directly:
public async Task<HttpResponseMessage> Run( HttpRequestMessage req, ILogger log)
{
    var cloudEvent = await req.ToCloudEventAsync();
}
The extension implementation will read the ContentType header of the incoming request and
automatically select the correct built-in event format decoder. Your code can always pass an
overriding format decoder instance as the first argument if needed.
If your HTTP handler needs to return a CloudEvent, you copy the CloudEvent into the
response with the CopyFromAsync() extension method:
var cloudEvent = new CloudEvent("com.example.myevent", new Uri("urn:example-com:mysource"))
{
    ContentType = new ContentType(MediaTypeNames.Application.Json),
    Data = JsonConvert.SerializeObject("hey there!")
};
await context.Response.CopyFromAsync(cloudEvent, 
                                     ContentMode.Structured, 
                                     new JsonEventFormatter());
context.Response.StatusCode = (int)HttpStatusCode.OK; 
AMQP
The SDK provides extensions for the AMQPNetLite package.
For AMQP support, you must reference the CloudNative.CloudEvents.Amqp assembly and
reference the namespace in your code with using CloudNative.CloudEvents.Amqp.
The AmqpCloudEventMessage extends the AMQPNetLite.Message class. The constructor
allows creating a new AMQP message that holds a CloudEvent in either structured or binary
content mode.
var cloudEvent = new CloudEvent("com.example.myevent", new Uri("urn:example-com:mysource"))
{
    ContentType = new ContentType(MediaTypeNames.Application.Json),
    Data = JsonConvert.SerializeObject("hey there!")
};
var message = new AmqpCloudEventMessage( cloudEvent, 
                                         ContentMode.Structured, 
                                         new JsonEventFormatter());
For mapping a received Message to a CloudEvent, you can use the ToCloudEvent() method:
   var receivedCloudEvent = await message.ToCloudEvent();
MQTT
The SDK provides extensions for the MQTTnet package.
For MQTT support, you must reference the CloudNative.CloudEvents.Mqtt assembly and
reference the namespace in your code with using CloudNative.CloudEvents.Mqtt.
The MqttCloudEventMessage extends the MqttApplicationMessage class. The constructor
allows creating a new MQTT message that holds a CloudEvent in structured content mode.
var cloudEvent = new CloudEvent("com.example.myevent", new Uri("urn:example-com:mysource"))
{
    ContentType = new ContentType(MediaTypeNames.Application.Json),
    Data = JsonConvert.SerializeObject("hey there!")
};
var message = new MqttCloudEventMessage( cloudEvent, 
                                         new JsonEventFormatter());
For mapping a received MqttApplicationMessage to a CloudEvent, you can use the
ToCloudEvent() method:
   var receivedCloudEvent = await message.ToCloudEvent();