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heitech.shopware-integration

A Library to integrate the shopware6 Rest Api into your .NET C# Code.

For experimenting with the API first, I suggest you to download the prepared Shopware-Api-Postman Collection in this repository. If you do not know how to do that, check out the readme for that one

To install the package of the StateManager (see below, recommended way to interact). simply use:

dotnet add package heitech.ShopwareIntegration.State

or see for yourself on Nuget Repository

References

Check the API reference here.

Also see this Site for handling of Authentication

Idea

This library allows you to access a wrapped HttpClient that handles all the Authentication and Shopware API specific quirks.

You can use the lower level ShopwareClient instance which is just a thin wrapper including a retry for the Authentication.

But I would recommend the IStateManager interface, which can be accessed via the heitech.ShopwareIntegration.State.Factory static class. This also includes a cache, a logger and a set of higher level methods that handle all the setup for the REST API like filters, associations and more.

You will need a specific DataContext for each Type of request (Get, GetAll, Create, Update, Delete) but it is easier to use, since you do not need to know all the Shopware API quirks. Except for the filter objects, that are either supplied via the IFIlter Interface, its implementations or the FilterBuilder class. But the easiest way is to create an anonymous object (see example below. )

Here you can find the Filtering reference from the API.

Example:

A simple generic call to get a Page of the Entity of Type T (BaseEntity)

public async Task<IEnumerable<T>> GetAsync<T>(int pageNo, object? includes = null)
        where T : BaseEntity
{
    // create an Instance of the IStateManager with the default pipeline
    // including the logger and custom memory cache
    IStateManager state = await Factory.CreateAsync(
        new HttpClientConfiguration() 
        /* set the configuration to your shop/demo-shop to test it properly*/
    );

    // creates an anonymous object that will be serialized as the filterObject 
    // for the api endpoint
    var filter = new
    {
        limit = 100,
        page = pageNo,
        includes = includes
    };
    // the DataContext object that specifies a Paged request
    var pageContext = DataContext.GetPage<T>(pageNo: filter.page);
    // apply the filter for the request Pipeline
    pageContext.SetFilter(filter);

    var details = (await state.RetrievePage<T>(pageContext)).ToArray();

    return details;
}

In the latest version there is also a shortHand via extension methods for this:

//...
var stateManager = Factory.CreateAsync(new HttpClientConfiguration() /* set the configuration to your shop/demo-shop to test it properly*/);
// extension method that already sets up the correct DataContext etc.
var details = await stateManager.GetDetail(id: "the-id", pageNo: 1);
// includes a performance boost if you like to request multiple pages Concurrently:
var filter = new { page = 1, limit = 100 };
var descriptions = new PageQueryDescription[] { new(pageNo: 1, filter: filter), new(pageNo: 2, filter: filter), new(pageNo: 3, filter: filter) };
var pages = await stateManager.GetMultiplePagesConcurrently(descriptions)
//...

Models

Some Models do exist already, but for the ones you might need, you have to create your own Models

Therefore:

  1. Inherit from BaseEntity [or if you are intend on using the DataContext use the DetailsEntity]. (allows for common json serialization/deserialization methods and properties)
  2. Add the ModelUriAttribute. (this appendeds the supplied string to the BaseAddress of the wrapped HttpClient: '/api/{modelUri}'). the modelURI can be found in the overview

You don´t need to specify all Properties, only the ones you want to access, since the BaseEntity has a Property called AdditionalProperties. Also you can specify via the Includes filterso only the needed fields are fetched and deserialized. (to save on bandwidth)

example of Unit Ressource from the Shopware Api.

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text.Json.Serialization;
using heitech.ShopwareIntegration.Configuration;

namespace heitech.ShopwareIntegration.Models
{
    [ModelUri("unit")]
    public sealed class Unit : BaseEntity
    {
        [JsonPropertyName("name")]
        public string Name { get; set; } = default!;

        [JsonPropertyName("shortCode")]
        public string ShortCode { get; set; } = default!;

        [JsonPropertyName("translated")]
        public bool Translated { get; set; }

        [JsonPropertyName("createdAt")]
        public DateTime CreatedAt { get; set; }

        [JsonPropertyName("updatedAt")]
        public DateTime UpdatedAt { get; set; }

        [JsonPropertyName("customFields")]
        public object CustomFields { get; set; } = default!;

        [JsonPropertyName("products")]
        public List<Product> Products { get; set; } = new();

        public Unit() : base()
        { }
    }
}

known caveats / issues

  • Make sure to use the System.Text.Json Attributes on your Model properties (not the Newtonsoft.Json ones) or else the result will only have the AdditionalProperties filled up and not your Custom Properties
  • If you want to extend the already implemented models you need to apply the ModelUri Attribute on the class level again, since it is not Inherited

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A Library to integrate the shopware Rest Api.

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