I've been struggling with my routing for some time now and after a few days of trying to Google the solution without luck, I'm hoping someone may be able to shine some light on my problem.
I have the following routes in my WebApiConfig:
config.Routes.MapHttpRoute(
name: "AccountStuffId",
routeTemplate: "api/Account/{action}/{Id}",
defaults: new { controller = "Account", Id = RouteParameter.Optional }
);
config.Routes.MapHttpRoute(
name: "AccountStuffAlias",
routeTemplate: "api/Account/{action}/{Alias}",
defaults: new { controller = "Account", Alias = RouteParameter.Optional }
);
and the following controller methods:
[HttpGet]
public Account GetAccountById(string Id)
{
return null;
}
[HttpGet]
public Account GetAccountByAlias(string alias)
{
return null;
}
If I call:
/API/Account/GetAccountById/stuff
then it properly calls GetAccountById
.
But if I call /API/Account/GetAccountByAlias/stuff
then nothing happens.
Clearly order matters here because if I switch my declarations of my routes in my WebApiConfig, then /API/Account/GetAccountByAlias/stuff
properly calls GetAccountByAlias
, and /API/Account/GetAccountById/stuff
does nothing.
The two [HttpGet]
decorations are part of what I found on Google, but they don't seem to resolve the issue.
Any thoughts? Am I doing anything obviously wrong?
Edit:
When the route fails, the page displays the following:
<Error>
<Message>
No HTTP resource was found that matches the request URI 'http://localhost:6221/API/Account/GetAccountByAlias/stuff'.
</Message>
<MessageDetail>
No action was found on the controller 'Account' that matches the request.
</MessageDetail>
</Error>
You should be able to just have the following route:
config.Routes.MapHttpRoute(
name: "AccountStuffId",
routeTemplate: "api/Account/{action}/{Id}",
defaults: new { controller = "Account", Id = RouteParameter.Optional }
);
and do the following for your actions:
[HttpGet]
public Account GetAccountById(string Id)
{
return null;
}
[HttpGet]
public Account GetAccountByAlias([FromUri(Name="id")]string alias)
{
return null;
}
Is there a reason you need to be declaring two different routes?
Look at the guide at: http://www.asp.net/web-api/overview/web-api-routing-and-actions/routing-in-aspnet-web-api
They have one default route and going by the example all you need in your config is
routes.MapHttpRoute(
name: "API Default",
routeTemplate: "api/{controller}/{id}",
defaults: new { id = RouteParameter.Optional }
);
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