The RestSharp
package is now signed so there is no need to install RestSharp.Signed
, which is obsolete from v160.0.0.
Some time ago, we have decided to get rid of the reference to Newtonsoft.Json
package.
The intentions were good, we thought that the SimpleJson
library would be a good replacement that can be embedded to the library itself,
so we don't need to have any external references.
However, as many good intentions, that change created more issues than it solved. The number of issues on GitHub that are
related to JSON (de)serialization is growing and SimpleJson
is long abandoned. We faced a choice to start maintaining
SimpleJson
ourselves or use something else.
Since as per today almost every .NET project has a direct or indirect reference to Newtonsoft.Json
, we decided to bring it back as a dependency
and get rid of SimpleJson
. This will be done in RestSharp v107, the next major version.
To prepare for this change, we made quite a few changes in how serialization works in RestSharp. Before, objects were serialized
when added to the RestRequest
by using one of the AddBody
methods. That made it impossible to assign a custom
serializer on the client level, so it should have been done for each request. In v106.6 body parameter is serialized just
before executing the request. Delaying the serialization allowed us to add the client-level serializer.
It is still possible to assign custom (de)serializer per request, as before. In addition to that, you can
use the new method IRestClient.UseSerializer(IRestSerializer restSerializer)
. The IRestSerializer
interface
has methods for serialization and deserialization. Default serializers are the same as before.
From v106.6.2 you can use Newtonsoft.Json
for the RestClient
by using code from this snippet.
In addition to that, you can change the default XML serialization to use the System.Xml
serializer, also known
as DotNetXmlSerializer
and DotNetXmlDeserializer
. In v106.6.2, you can simply write:
client.UseDotNetXmlSerializer();
- Assemblies for .NET 4.5.2 and .NET Standard 2.0
- Easy installation using NuGet for most .NET flavors (signed)
- Automatic XML and JSON deserialization
- Supports custom serialization and deserialization via ISerializer and IDeserializer
- Fuzzy element name matching ('product_id' in XML/JSON will match C# property named 'ProductId')
- Automatic detection of type of content returned
- GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, HEAD, OPTIONS, DELETE, COPY supported
- Other non-standard HTTP methods also supported
- OAuth 1, OAuth 2, Basic, NTLM and Parameter-based Authenticators included
- Supports custom authentication schemes via IAuthenticator
- Multi-part form/file uploads
var client = new RestClient("http://example.com");
// client.Authenticator = new HttpBasicAuthenticator(username, password);
var request = new RestRequest("resource/{id}");
request.AddParameter("name", "value"); // adds to POST or URL querystring based on Method
request.AddUrlSegment("id", "123"); // replaces matching token in request.Resource
// add parameters for all properties on an object
request.AddJsonObject(@object);
// or just whitelisted properties
request.AddObject(object, "PersonId", "Name", ...);
// easily add HTTP Headers
request.AddHeader("header", "value");
// add files to upload (works with compatible verbs)
request.AddFile("file", path);
// execute the request
var response = client.Post(request);
var content = response.Content; // raw content as string
// or automatically deserialize result
// return content type is sniffed but can be explicitly set via RestClient.AddHandler();
var response2 = client.Post<Person>(request);
var name = response2.Data.Name;
// or download and save file to disk
client.DownloadData(request).SaveAs(path);
// easy async support
await client.ExecuteAsync(request);
// async with deserialization
var asyncHandle = client.PostAsync<Person>(request, response => {
Console.WriteLine(response.Data.Name);
});
// abort the request on demand
asyncHandle.Abort();