I'm having two controller controllers: ControllerA
and ControllerB
. The base class of each controller is Controller
.
The ControllerA
needs to return JSON in the default format (camelCase). The ControllerB
needs to return data in a different JSON format: snake_case.
How can I implement this in ASP.NET Core 3.x and 2.1?
I've tried the startup
with:
services .AddMvc() .AddJsonOptions(options => { options.SerializerSettings.Converters.Add(new StringEnumConverter()); options.SerializerSettings.ContractResolver = new DefaultContractResolver() { NamingStrategy = new SnakeCaseNamingStrategy() }; }) .AddControllersAsServices();
But this will change the serialization for all controllers, not just for ControllerB
. How can I configure or annotate this feature for 1 controller?
You can achieve this with a combination of an Action Filter and an Output Formatter.
Things look a little different for 3.0+, where the default JSON-formatters for 3.0+ are based on System.Text.Json
. At the time of writing, these don't have built-in support for a snake-case naming strategy.
However, if you're using Json.NET with 3.0+ (details in the docs), the SnakeCaseAttribute
from above is still viable, with a couple of changes:
JsonOutputFormatter
is now NewtonsoftJsonOutputFormatter
.NewtonsoftJsonOutputFormatter
constructor requires an argument of MvcOptions
.Here's the code:
public class SnakeCaseAttribute : ActionFilterAttribute { public override void OnActionExecuted(ActionExecutedContext ctx) { if (ctx.Result is ObjectResult objectResult) { objectResult.Formatters.Add(new NewtonsoftJsonOutputFormatter( new JsonSerializerSettings { ContractResolver = new DefaultContractResolver { NamingStrategy = new SnakeCaseNamingStrategy() } }, ctx.HttpContext.RequestServices.GetRequiredService<ArrayPool<char>>(), ctx.HttpContext.RequestServices.GetRequiredService<IOptions<MvcOptions>>().Value)); } } }
You can achieve this with a combination of an Action Filter and an Output Formatter. Here's an example of what the Action Filter might look like:
public class SnakeCaseAttribute : ActionFilterAttribute { public override void OnActionExecuted(ActionExecutedContext ctx) { if (ctx.Result is ObjectResult objectResult) { objectResult.Formatters.Add(new JsonOutputFormatter( new JsonSerializerSettings { ContractResolver = new DefaultContractResolver { NamingStrategy = new SnakeCaseNamingStrategy() } }, ctx.HttpContext.RequestServices.GetRequiredService<ArrayPool<char>>())); } } }
Using OnActionExecuted
, the code runs after the corresponding action and first checks to see if the result is an ObjectResult
(which also applies to OkObjectResult
thanks to inheritance). If it is an ObjectResult
, the filter simply adds a customised version of a JsonOutputFormatter
that will serialise the properties using SnakeCaseNamingStrategy
. The second parameter in the JsonOutputFormatter
constructor is retrieved from the DI container.
In order to use this filter, just apply it to the relevant controller:
[SnakeCase] public class ControllerB : Controller { }
Note: You might want to create the JsonOutputFormatter
/NewtonsoftJsonOutputFormatter
ahead of time somewhere, for example - I've not gone that far in the example as that's secondary to the question at hand.
Ended up creating this method that I use on my end points:
{ // needed to get the same date and property formatting // as the Search Service: var settings = new JsonSerializerSettings { ContractResolver = new DefaultContractResolver() { NamingStrategy = new SnakeCaseNamingStrategy() }, DateFormatString = "yyyy-MM-ddTHH:mm:ss.fffZ" }; return Json(result, settings); }
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