Bonyan.AspNetCore.Job 1.1.2-pre6

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paket add Bonyan.AspNetCore.Job --version 1.1.2-pre6                
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// Install Bonyan.AspNetCore.Job as a Cake Addin
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Bonyan Modular Application Framework Documentation

Welcome to the Bonyan Modular Application Framework documentation. Bonyan offers a sophisticated framework designed specifically for .NET Core developers aiming to construct highly scalable, maintainable, and modular applications. Leveraging the concept of modules and dependency management, Bonyan facilitates the decomposition of complex applications into self-contained, interrelated components, promoting a refined architectural paradigm.

This guide provides an in-depth exploration of the purpose of Bonyan, detailed installation steps, comprehensive usage examples, the creation of modules, and the lifecycle management of modules, ensuring you can effectively utilize Bonyan's full capabilities to create modular, extensible, and dynamic .NET Core applications.

1. Introduction

Bonyan provides an advanced modular framework intended to ensure that your .NET Core applications are modular by design. In Bonyan, a module is a fundamental abstraction—a self-contained unit encapsulating a specific set of functionalities, thereby making the architecture inherently scalable, maintainable, and reusable.

  • Modular Structure: Your application is segmented into discrete modules, each responsible for a distinct subsystem, such as security, data persistence, or API management.
  • Dependency Management: Modules can declare inter-module dependencies, allowing for a clean and predictable initialization order.
  • Lifecycle Management: Bonyan provides a comprehensive set of lifecycle hooks that permit configuration of modules at different stages—from startup to runtime—granting developers fine-grained control over module behavior.

The principal advantage of Bonyan lies in its capacity to decouple system components, thereby enabling developers to manage sophisticated systems with heightened precision, scalability, and maintainability.

2. Installation

To integrate Bonyan into your .NET Core project, execute the following command:

dotnet add package Bonyan.AspNetCore

This command adds the Bonyan library to your project, unlocking its powerful modular capabilities and tools.

3. Getting Started

After installing Bonyan, initiate an application using BonyanApplication.CreateApplicationBuilder. This command establishes an application builder that configures modules through your specified main application module:

var builder = BonyanApplication.CreateApplicationBuilder<YourMainModule>(args);

var app = builder.Build();

context.Run();

In this example, YourMainModule acts as the entry point, defining the core structure and dependencies for your entire application. Modules can be organized hierarchically, facilitating seamless dependency management, lifecycle orchestration, and configuration.

4. Creating a Modular Application

Bonyan's modular approach ensures that each module serves as an isolated unit responsible for specific services, configurations, or middleware. This architectural style empowers developers to compartmentalize application components, allowing independent management of each segment of the system.

Example: Creating a Basic Module

using Bonyan.Modularity;
using Bonyan.Modularity.Attributes;

namespace BonyanTemplate.Api
{
    [DependOn(typeof(SecurityModule), typeof(PersistenceModule))]
    public class YourMainModule : Module
    {
        public override Task OnPreConfigureAsync(ModularityContext context)
        {
            // Pre-configure services
            context.Services.AddLogging();
            return base.OnPreConfigureAsync(context);
        }

        public override Task OnConfigureAsync(ModularityContext context)
        {
            // Register application-specific services
            return base.OnConfigureAsync(context);
        }
    }
}
  • Dependency Declaration: Utilizing the [DependOn] attribute, YourMainModule ensures that SecurityModule and PersistenceModule are loaded prior to its own configuration, thereby establishing an explicit hierarchy of dependencies.
  • Lifecycle Control: The module overrides lifecycle events such as OnPreConfigureAsync and OnConfigureAsync, providing precise control over how and when services are initialized.

5. Deep Dive into Modules

In Bonyan, a Module represents a self-contained segment of the application. Modules can range in complexity—from simple components managing basic tasks like logging and configuration to sophisticated modules encompassing entire subsystems, such as security or data persistence.

Types of Modules

  • Module: The foundational abstraction for all Bonyan modules, offering standard lifecycle hooks for general-purpose application configuration.
  • WebModule: A specialized extension of Module, designed for web applications, including additional lifecycle events that are essential for handling HTTP requests, middleware, and other web-centric processes.

Dependency Management

Modules declare dependencies through the [DependOn] attribute. Bonyan utilizes this information to establish a * loading order*, ensuring that all dependencies are satisfied before a module proceeds with its configuration.

[DependOn(typeof(SecurityModule), typeof(PersistenceModule))]
public class ApplicationModule : Module { }

Dependencies are loaded early, guaranteeing that essential services are available for modules that require their functionality.

6. Web Modules vs. Modules

Bonyan introduces two primary types of modules: Module and WebModule.

WebModule: Specialized for Web Applications

  • WebModule extends Module and is explicitly designed for web services.
  • It introduces additional lifecycle events, such as:
    • OnPreApplicationAsync: Ideal for configuring middleware or other services that must be set before application startup.
    • OnApplicationAsync: Used for registering critical services like health checks, API endpoints, and other runtime services.
    • OnPostApplicationAsync: Execute finalization tasks after the main application starts running.

When to Use WebModule vs. Module

  • Utilize Module for core application services, configurations, or components that are agnostic of a web context.
  • Opt for WebModule when working with components that require web-specific behavior, such as HTTP APIs, middleware, or any startup tasks that are inherently linked to a web server environment.

Example

public class MyWebModule : WebModule
{
    public override Task OnPreApplicationAsync(ModularityApplicationContext context)
    {
        context.Services.Configure<JwtSigningOptions>(options =>
        {
            options.SigningKey = "super-secure-signing-key";
        });
        return Task.CompletedTask;
    }
}

In this example, OnPreApplicationAsync is overridden to configure JWT settings before the application starts, demonstrating the web-specific capabilities of WebModule.

7. Module Lifecycle Events

Bonyan provides an extensive set of lifecycle events that allow developers to control the configuration and * initialization* of modules with precision.

General Lifecycle Events (Module):

  • OnPreConfigureAsync: Executed before the main configuration phase. Ideal for adding logging services or performing early configuration tasks.

  • OnConfigureAsync: The primary configuration stage where core services and options are registered.

  • OnPostConfigureAsync: Run after the main configuration, suitable for finalizing configuration settings.

  • OnPreInitializeAsync: Executed before the initialization phase begins.

  • OnInitializeAsync: Handles tasks during the module initialization phase.

  • OnPostInitializeAsync: Runs once initialization is complete.

Additional Web Lifecycle Events (WebModule):

  • OnPreApplicationAsync: Critical for configuring middleware or other pre-startup services.
  • OnApplicationAsync: Registers application-specific services, such as API endpoints, during startup.
  • OnPostApplicationAsync: Finalizes configurations or handles any post-startup tasks for web applications.

8. Advanced Module Example

Below is an advanced example demonstrating how to create a modular application using Bonyan, highlighting the dependency and lifecycle management aspects of the framework.

using Bonyan.Modularity;
using Bonyan.Modularity.Attributes;
using Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection;
using System.Threading.Tasks;

namespace BonyanAdvancedExample
{
    [DependOn(typeof(DataModule), typeof(SecurityModule))]
    public class MainApplicationModule : WebModule
    {
        public override Task OnPreConfigureAsync(ModularityContext context)
        {
            // Configure services before the main configuration
            context.Services.AddLogging();
            return base.OnPreConfigureAsync(context);
        }

        public override Task OnConfigureAsync(ModularityContext context)
        {
            // Register application-specific services or configure options
            context.Services.AddHttpClient();
            return base.OnConfigureAsync(context);
        }

        public override Task OnPreApplicationAsync(ModularityApplicationContext context)
        {
            // Middleware configuration before application startup
            context.Services.Configure<JwtSigningOptions>(options =>
            {
                options.SigningKey = "secure-signing-key";
            });
            return Task.CompletedTask;
        }
    }

    public class DataModule : Module
    {
        public override Task OnConfigureAsync(ModularityContext context)
        {
            // Register data-related services, such as a database context
            context.Services.AddDbContext<MyDbContext>();
            return base.OnConfigureAsync(context);
        }
    }

    public class SecurityModule : Module
    {
        public override Task OnConfigureAsync(ModularityContext context)
        {
            // Configure security-related services, such as authentication
            context.Services.AddAuthentication();
            return base.OnConfigureAsync(context);
        }
    }
}

Summary

  • Dependencies: The MainApplicationModule depends on DataModule and SecurityModule, ensuring that essential data and security configurations are completed before the main module is initialized.
  • Lifecycle Events: The modules utilize lifecycle hooks to set up services like logging, HTTP clients, JWT signing, and database contexts, showcasing how different stages can be used to properly initialize the application.

9. Conclusion

The Bonyan Modular Application Framework empowers developers to architect modular, extensible, and maintainable .NET Core applications. Structuring applications using modules with well-defined dependencies and carefully orchestrated lifecycle events ensures a scalable, maintainable, and clean architecture. The distinction between Module and WebModule allows for targeted optimizations—whether your focus is on core application services or on web-specific middleware and configurations.

Leverage the potential of modularity through Bonyan to create robust, scalable applications capable of evolving alongside the ever-changing demands of modern software development. Dive deeper into Bonyan's capabilities, and let modularity form the foundation of your architectural strategy.

Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net8.0 is compatible.  net8.0-android was computed.  net8.0-browser was computed.  net8.0-ios was computed.  net8.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net8.0-macos was computed.  net8.0-tvos was computed.  net8.0-windows was computed. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.

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1.1.5 77 11/6/2024
1.1.4 81 11/6/2024
1.1.3 85 11/5/2024
1.1.2-pre7 75 11/2/2024
1.1.2-pre6 72 11/2/2024
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1.1.1 89 10/30/2024
1.1.0 87 10/28/2024
1.0.9 73 10/28/2024
1.0.7 111 10/24/2024