Azure.Core provides shared primitives, abstractions, and helpers for modern .NET Azure SDK client libraries.
These libraries follow the Azure SDK Design Guidelines for .NET
and can be easily identified by package and namespaces names starting with 'Azure', e.g. Azure.Storage.Blobs
.
A more complete list of client libraries using Azure.Core can be found here.
Azure.Core allows client libraries to expose common functionality in a consistent fashion, so that once you learn how to use these APIs in one client library, you will know how to use them in other client libraries.
Source code | Package (NuGet) | API reference documentation
Typically, you will not need to install Azure.Core; it will be installed for you when you install one of the client libraries using it. In case you want to install it explicitly (to implement your own client library, for example), you can find the NuGet package here.
The main shared concepts of Azure.Core (and so Azure SDK libraries using Azure.Core) include:
- Configuring service clients, e.g. configuring retries, logging (
ClientOptions
). - Accessing HTTP response details (
Response
,Response<T>
). - Calling long-running operations (
Operation<T>
). - Paging and asynchronous streams (
AsyncPageable<T>
). - Exceptions for reporting errors from service requests in a consistent fashion. (
RequestFailedException
). - Customizing requests (
RequestContext
). - Abstractions for representing Azure SDK credentials. (
TokenCredentials
).
Below, you will find sections explaining these shared concepts in more detail.
We guarantee that all client instance methods are thread-safe and independent of each other (guideline). This ensures that the recommendation of reusing client instances is always safe, even across threads.
Client options | Accessing the response | Long-running operations | Handling failures | Diagnostics | Mocking | Client lifetime
NOTE: Samples in this file apply only to packages that follow Azure SDK Design Guidelines. Names of such packages usually start with Azure
.
Azure SDK client libraries typically expose one or more service client types that
are the main starting points for calling corresponding Azure services.
You can easily find these client types as their names end with the word Client.
For example, BlockBlobClient
can be used to call blob storage service,
and KeyClient
can be used to access Key Vault service cryptographic keys.
These client types can be instantiated by calling a simple constructor,
or its overload that takes various configuration options.
These options are passed as a parameter that extends ClientOptions
class exposed by Azure.Core.
Various service specific options are usually added to its subclasses, but a set of SDK-wide options are
available directly on ClientOptions
.
SecretClientOptions options = new SecretClientOptions()
{
Retry =
{
Delay = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(2),
MaxRetries = 10,
Mode = RetryMode.Fixed
},
Diagnostics =
{
IsLoggingContentEnabled = true,
ApplicationId = "myApplicationId"
}
};
SecretClient client = new SecretClient(new Uri("http://example.com"), new DefaultAzureCredential(), options);
More on client configuration in client configuration samples.
Service clients have methods that can be used to call Azure services. We refer to these client methods service methods.
Service methods return a shared Azure.Core type Response<T>
(in rare cases its non-generic sibling, a raw Response
).
This type provides access to both the deserialized result of the service call,
and to the details of the HTTP response returned from the server.
// create a client
var client = new SecretClient(new Uri("http://example.com"), new DefaultAzureCredential());
// call a service method, which returns Response<T>
Response<KeyVaultSecret> response = await client.GetSecretAsync("SecretName");
// Response<T> has two main accessors.
// Value property for accessing the deserialized result of the call
KeyVaultSecret secret = response.Value;
// .. and GetRawResponse method for accessing all the details of the HTTP response
Response http = response.GetRawResponse();
// for example, you can access HTTP status
int status = http.Status;
// or the headers
foreach (HttpHeader header in http.Headers)
{
Console.WriteLine($"{header.Name} {header.Value}");
}
More on response types in response samples.
To create an Azure SDK log listener that outputs messages to console use AzureEventSourceListener.CreateConsoleLogger
method.
// Setup a listener to monitor logged events.
using AzureEventSourceListener listener = AzureEventSourceListener.CreateConsoleLogger();
More on logging in diagnostics samples.
When a service call fails Azure.RequestFailedException
would get thrown. The exception type provides a Status property with an HTTP status code and an ErrorCode property with a service-specific error code.
try
{
KeyVaultSecret secret = client.GetSecret("NonexistentSecret");
}
// handle exception with status code 404
catch (RequestFailedException e) when (e.Status == 404)
{
// handle not found error
Console.WriteLine("ErrorCode " + e.ErrorCode);
}
More on handling responses in response samples.
If a service call returns multiple values in pages, it would return Pageable<T>/AsyncPageable<T>
as a result. You can iterate over AsyncPageable
directly or in pages.
// call a service method, which returns AsyncPageable<T>
AsyncPageable<SecretProperties> allSecretProperties = client.GetPropertiesOfSecretsAsync();
await foreach (SecretProperties secretProperties in allSecretProperties)
{
Console.WriteLine(secretProperties.Name);
}
For more information on paged responses, see Pagination with the Azure SDK for .NET.
Some operations take long time to complete and require polling for their status. Methods starting long-running operations return *Operation<T>
types.
The WaitForCompletionAsync
method is an easy way to wait for operation completion and get the resulting value.
// create a client
SecretClient client = new SecretClient(new Uri("http://example.com"), new DefaultAzureCredential());
// Start the operation
DeleteSecretOperation operation = await client.StartDeleteSecretAsync("SecretName");
Response<DeletedSecret> response = await operation.WaitForCompletionAsync();
DeletedSecret value = response.Value;
Console.WriteLine(value.Name);
Console.WriteLine(value.ScheduledPurgeDate);
More on long-running operations in long-running operation samples.
Besides general configuration of service clients through ClientOptions
, it is possible to customize the requests sent by service clients
using protocol methods or convenience APIs that expose RequestContext
as a parameter.
var context = new RequestContext();
context.AddClassifier(404, isError: false);
Response response = await client.GetPetAsync("pet1", context);
More on request customization in RequestContext samples.
One of the most important cross-cutting features of our new client libraries using Azure.Core is that they are designed for mocking. Mocking is enabled by:
- providing a protected parameterless constructor on client types.
- making service methods virtual.
- providing APIs for constructing model types returned from virtual service methods. To find these factory methods look for types with the ModelFactory suffix, e.g.
SecretModelFactory
.
For example, the ConfigurationClient.Get method can be mocked (with Moq) as follows:
// Create a mock response
var mockResponse = new Mock<Response>();
// Create a mock value
var mockValue = SecretModelFactory.KeyVaultSecret(
SecretModelFactory.SecretProperties(new Uri("http://example.com"))
);
// Create a client mock
var mock = new Mock<SecretClient>();
// Setup client method
mock.Setup(c => c.GetSecret("Name", null, default))
.Returns(Response.FromValue(mockValue, mockResponse.Object));
// Use the client mock
SecretClient client = mock.Object;
KeyVaultSecret secret = client.GetSecret("Name");
More on mocking in Unit testing and mocking with the Azure SDK for .NET.
Azure SDKs are instrumented for distributed tracing using OpenTelemetry. Distributed tracing allows to follow request through multiple services, record how long network or logical call take along with structured properties describing such operations.
More on diagnostics in diagnostics samples.
To setup distributed tracing for your application follow your observability vendor documentation. If you use Azure Monitor, follow the Start Monitoring Application guide.
Three main ways of troubleshooting failures are inspecting exceptions, enabling logging, and distributed tracing
Explore and install available Azure SDK libraries.
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This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact [email protected] with any additional questions or comments.