Occasus.BlazorUI 8.1.7

Prefix Reserved
There is a newer version of this package available.
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package Occasus.BlazorUI --version 8.1.7                
NuGet\Install-Package Occasus.BlazorUI -Version 8.1.7                
This command is intended to be used within the Package Manager Console in Visual Studio, as it uses the NuGet module's version of Install-Package.
<PackageReference Include="Occasus.BlazorUI" Version="8.1.7" />                
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add Occasus.BlazorUI --version 8.1.7                
#r "nuget: Occasus.BlazorUI, 8.1.7"                
#r directive can be used in F# Interactive and Polyglot Notebooks. Copy this into the interactive tool or source code of the script to reference the package.
// Install Occasus.BlazorUI as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=Occasus.BlazorUI&version=8.1.7

// Install Occasus.BlazorUI as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=Occasus.BlazorUI&version=8.1.7                

Occasus

.net core IOptions manager and UI

Breaking changes

  • Going from 7.0.x to 8.0.x requires .net 8
  • Going to 8.1.x will change the encryption method, settings will be scrambled. Copy the settings out to clipboard/file and delete the encrypted settings from storage before upgrading.

What is it?

At it's core Occasus is an easy way to move .Net Options from the appSettings.json file to another storage repository.

It also has an optional UI to allow editing of those values during runtime.

What is supported?

Currently .Net core 8; Console Applications, Blazor Apps and API, and Azure Functions.

If you have a dependancy injected IConfigurationBuilder and IServiceCollection you should be good to go.

How do I get started?

First of all you need to pick one (or more) of the repository packages for Occasus, and possibly a UI package. See more below.

Then you can use them in your configuration:

Start with an IConfigurationBuilder

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);

builder.UseSettingsFrom...(options)

Where the UseSettingsFrom... is an extension from a Occasus repository package

Then add your options to the IServiceCollection

.WithOptions<MyOptionsClass>()

Note: Here the WithOptions is an extension to the repository added to the builder.

You can also refer back to the Configured Option, just like regular Option injecting, where you can use the OptionsBuilder:

.WithOptions<MyOptions>(out var optionsBuilder);
optionsBuilder.Validate(x => x.SomeRequiredValue != null && x.ListOfStrings.Any(), "MyOptions Strings must have some value");

So you can validate on startup here too.

Finally

You can inject the .Net IOptions<MyOptionsClass> into your application.

private readonly MyOptionsClass myoptions;
public MyService(IOptionsSnapshot<MyOptionsClass> myoptions)
{
    this.myoptions = myoptions.Value;
}

You can read more in the link above but if your usinbg IOptionsSnapshot, this is a Scoped access and the value will be retrieved everytime you start a new scope. This means any changes in the UI should be reflected without having to restart the application.

Example

So if you were getting settings from SQL using the Occasus SQLEFRepository and using the Blazor UI package

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);

builder.AddOccasusUI()

.UseOptionsFromSQLEF(settings =>
{
    settings.WithSQLConnection(sqlConnBuilder =>
    {
        sqlConnBuilder.ConnectionString = builder.Configuration["ConnectionStrings:SettingsConnectionString"];
    });
})
.WithOptions<ApplicationOptions>()

Where ApplicationOptions is a class or record for the options from your application.

Occasus.JSONRepository

Nuget

GitHub last commit GitHub Workflow Status

dotnet add package Occasus.JSONRepository
Install-Package Occasus.JSONRepository

This allows you to use a .json file as a repository for settings, it also allows you to use the appSettings.json file.

Simple usage:

UseOptionsFromJsonFile(string filePath)

builder.UseOptionsFromJsonFile("settings/settings.json")
    .WithOptions<ApplicationOptions>();

Advanced JSON Options:

UseOptionsFromJsonFile(string filePath, Action<JsonSourceSettings> jsonSourceSettings)

builder.UseOptionsFromJsonFile("appsettings.json", settings =>
{
    settings.JsonWriterOptions((ref JsonWriterOptions options) => options.Indented = true);
    settings.JsonNodeOptions((ref JsonNodeOptions options) => options.PropertyNameCaseInsensitive = true);
})
    .WithOptions<TestAppSettingsJson>();

JsonSourceSettings

JsonSourceSettings is a class that configures the repository:

  • ClearWholeFile - Boolean flag, when writing to the file, start with a clean file, or leave other json Nodes alone. This options is useful during development when your application options may change.

Occasus.JsonRepository uses System.Text.Json and the following actions are passed directly to that:

  • JsonDocumentOptions(ActionRef<JsonDocumentOptions> options) - this is a ref for the JsonDocumentOptions configuration action.
  • JsonNodeOptions(ActionRef<JsonNodeOptions> options) - this is a ref for the JsonNodeOptions configuration action.
  • JsonSerializerOptions(Action<JsonSerializerOptions> options) - this is not a ref but it's an action for the JsonSerializerOptions
  • JsonWriterOptions(ActionRef<JsonWriterOptions> options) - this is a ref for the JsonWriterOptions configuration action.

Occasus.SQLRepository & Occasus.SQLEFRepository

Occasus.SQLRepository

Nuget

GitHub last commit GitHub Workflow Status

dotnet add package Occasus.SQLRepository
Install-Package Occasus.SQLRepository

Occasus.SQLEFRepository

Nuget

GitHub last commit GitHub Workflow Status

dotnet add package Occasus.SQLEFRepository
Install-Package Occasus.SQLEFRepository

This allows you to use a SQL Server for settings.

Usage example:

builder.AddOccasusUI()

.UseOptionsFromSQL(settings =>
{
    settings.EncryptSettings = true;
    settings.EncryptionKey = "a password";
    settings.WithSQLConnection(sqlConnBuilder =>
    {
        sqlConnBuilder.ConnectionString = builder.Configuration["ConnectionStrings:SettingsConnectionString"];
        sqlConnBuilder.PersistSecurityInfo = true;
    });
})

Using EF DbOptions example:

...
.UseOptionsFromSQLEF(settings =>
{
    ...
    settings.WithSQLConnection(sqlConnBuilder =>
    {
        sqlConnBuilder.ConnectionString = builder.Configuration["ConnectionStrings:SettingsConnectionString"];
    }, dbOptions =>
    {
        dbOptions.EnableRetryOnFailure(3, new(0, 0, 5), null);
    });
})

SQLEFSourceSettings

SQLEFSourceSettings is a class that configures the repository:

  • ConnectionString - Your typical SQL connection string.
  • TableName - (string) What table to use in SQL (Default "Settings")
  • KeyColumnName - (string) The Key column name to use (Default "Key")
  • ValueColumnName - (string) The Value column name to use (Default "Value")
  • EncryptSettings - (bool) Whether or not to encrypt the value using Salted AES (Default false)
  • EncryptionKey - (string) The key passed to AES, minimum length is 12 charicters;

SQLEFSourceSettings has a handy WithSQLConnection(Action<SqlConnectionStringBuilder> builder, Action\<SqlServerDbContextOptionsBuilder>? sqlServerDbContextOptionsBuilder) method

SQLSourceSettings has a handy WithSQLConnection(Action<SqlConnectionStringBuilder> builder) method

These allow you to build the connection string and the DbContext options fluently, like you would any normal SQL Connection.

System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnectionStringBuilder

Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Infrastructure.SqlServerDbContextOptionsBuilder

AES is provided by System.Security.Cryptography

    BlockBitSize = 128;
    KeyBitSize = 256;
    SaltBitSize = 64;
    Iterations = 10000;

Occasus.BlazorUI

Nuget

GitHub last commit GitHub Workflow Status

dotnet add package Occasus.BlazorUI
Install-Package Occasus.BlazorUI

The Blazor UI package adds a UI component to the configurable path /occasus

Simple usage:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);

builder.AddOccasusUI()
var app = builder.Build();
app.UseOccasusUI("mypassword");

Or if you need to move Occasus to another URL you can use:

var app = builder.Build();
app.UseOccasusUI("mypassword", "/other");

Attributes

You can decorate your Options Class with several attributes to determing how the control is shown in the UI.

public record UserDetails
{
    [Display(Name = "A User Name"), Required]
    public string? User { get; set; }
    [Input(InputType.Password), RestartRequired]
    public string? Password { get; set; }
}

The 'RestartRequired' attribute is used to tell the UI to display a message whenever the class or the property (depending on where you put the Attribute) is changed, that the application needs restarting for the option to have an effect. Note: Whether or not the option has an effect is down to your application, Occasus will change it real time regardless.

Occasus.FeatureManagement

Nuget

GitHub last commit GitHub Workflow Status

dotnet add package Occasus.FeatureManagement
Install-Package Occasus.FeatureManagement

FeatureManagement integrates with Microsoft.FeatureManagement.AspNetCore

Usage:

.WithFeatureFlagOptions<FeatureManagement>(builder.Configuration);

In order to add feature flags the method requres the IConfiguration interface. This makes it hard to use with Console Apps and Azure Functions. But the inteded use of Feature Flags is API and UI apps.

WithFeatureFlagOptions also supports the OptionsBuilder parameter.

Example Feature Flag (This is using the standard .Net feature)

public FeatureManagedService(IFeatureManager featureManager)
{
    ...
}

public string GetValue(string flag)
{
    ...
    return featureManager.IsEnabledAsync(flag) ? "Yes" : "No";
}

As you can see feature flags are only ever booleans, and as such a feature flag class added to Occasus should just be booleans. However, the FeatureManagement system from Microsoft does support extended information to vary the feature flag by various different inputs. This, in theory should still work with Occasus if you structure your class correctly. It is untested at this time.

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.

NuGet packages

This package is not used by any NuGet packages.

GitHub repositories

This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.

Version Downloads Last updated
8.1.9 347 6/4/2024
8.1.8 106 6/4/2024
8.1.7 96 6/4/2024
8.1.6 183 5/14/2024
8.1.4 128 5/14/2024
8.1.3 368 3/11/2024
8.1.1 80 3/11/2024
7.0.13 107 3/11/2024
7.0.12 105 3/11/2024
7.0.11 121 3/11/2024
7.0.9 123 3/9/2024
7.0.8 119 3/9/2024
7.0.7 413 2/22/2024
7.0.6 346 12/8/2023
6.0.55 310 10/19/2023
6.0.54 138 10/19/2023
6.0.53 144 10/19/2023
6.0.51 122 10/18/2023
6.0.50 420 7/20/2023
6.0.49 484 2/10/2023
6.0.48 359 12/19/2022
6.0.47 297 12/19/2022
6.0.46 304 12/19/2022
6.0.45 321 12/15/2022
6.0.44 342 11/23/2022
6.0.43 327 11/23/2022
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6.0.40 336 11/22/2022
6.0.39 322 11/21/2022
6.0.38 326 11/21/2022
6.0.37 347 11/21/2022
6.0.36 360 11/17/2022
6.0.35 347 11/15/2022
6.0.34 331 11/15/2022
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6.0.32 367 10/28/2022