Custom formatters in ASP.NET Core Web API

ASP.NET Core MVC supports data exchange in Web APIs using input and output formatters. Input formatters are used by Model Binding. Output formatters are used to format responses.

The framework provides built-in input and output formatters for JSON and XML. It provides a built-in output formatter for plain text, but doesn't provide an input formatter for plain text.

This article shows how to add support for additional formats by creating custom formatters. For an example of a custom plain text input formatter, see TextPlainInputFormatter on GitHub.

View or download sample code (how to download)

When to use a custom formatter

Use a custom formatter to add support for a content type that isn't handled by the built-in formatters.

Overview of how to create a custom formatter

To create a custom formatter:

  • For serializing data sent to the client, create an output formatter class.
  • For deserializing data received from the client, create an input formatter class.
  • Add instances of formatter classes to the InputFormatters and OutputFormatters collections in MvcOptions.

Create a custom formatter

To create a formatter:

The following code shows the VcardOutputFormatter class from the sample:

public class VcardOutputFormatter : TextOutputFormatter
{
    public VcardOutputFormatter()
    {
        SupportedMediaTypes.Add(MediaTypeHeaderValue.Parse("text/vcard"));

        SupportedEncodings.Add(Encoding.UTF8);
        SupportedEncodings.Add(Encoding.Unicode);
    }

    protected override bool CanWriteType(Type? type)
        => typeof(Contact).IsAssignableFrom(type)
            || typeof(IEnumerable<Contact>).IsAssignableFrom(type);

    public override async Task WriteResponseBodyAsync(
        OutputFormatterWriteContext context, Encoding selectedEncoding)
    {
        var httpContext = context.HttpContext;
        var serviceProvider = httpContext.RequestServices;

        var logger = serviceProvider.GetRequiredService<ILogger<VcardOutputFormatter>>();
        var buffer = new StringBuilder();

        if (context.Object is IEnumerable<Contact> contacts)
        {
            foreach (var contact in contacts)
            {
                FormatVcard(buffer, contact, logger);
            }
        }
        else
        {
            FormatVcard(buffer, (Contact)context.Object!, logger);
        }

        await httpContext.Response.WriteAsync(buffer.ToString(), selectedEncoding);
    }

    private static void FormatVcard(
        StringBuilder buffer, Contact contact, ILogger logger)
    {
        buffer.AppendLine("BEGIN:VCARD");
        buffer.AppendLine("VERSION:2.1");
        buffer.AppendLine($"N:{contact.LastName};{contact.FirstName}");
        buffer.AppendLine($"FN:{contact.FirstName} {contact.LastName}");
        buffer.AppendLine($"UID:{contact.Id}");
        buffer.AppendLine("END:VCARD");

        logger.LogInformation("Writing {FirstName} {LastName}",
            contact.FirstName, contact.LastName);
    }
}

Derive from the appropriate base class

For text media types (for example, vCard), derive from the TextInputFormatter or TextOutputFormatter base class:

public class VcardOutputFormatter : TextOutputFormatter

For binary types, derive from the InputFormatter or OutputFormatter base class.

Specify supported media types and encodings

In the constructor, specify supported media types and encodings by adding to the SupportedMediaTypes and SupportedEncodings collections:

public VcardOutputFormatter()
{
    SupportedMediaTypes.Add(MediaTypeHeaderValue.Parse("text/vcard"));

    SupportedEncodings.Add(Encoding.UTF8);
    SupportedEncodings.Add(Encoding.Unicode);
}

A formatter class can not use constructor injection for its dependencies. For example, ILogger<VcardOutputFormatter> can't be added as a parameter to the constructor. To access services, use the context object that gets passed in to the methods. A code example in this article and the sample show how to do this.

Override CanReadType and CanWriteType

Specify the type to deserialize into or serialize from by overriding the CanReadType or CanWriteType methods. For example, to create vCard text from a Contact type and vice versa:

protected override bool CanWriteType(Type? type)
    => typeof(Contact).IsAssignableFrom(type)
        || typeof(IEnumerable<Contact>).IsAssignableFrom(type);

The CanWriteResult method

In some scenarios, CanWriteResult must be overridden rather than CanWriteType. Use CanWriteResult if the following conditions are true:

  • The action method returns a model class.
  • There are derived classes that might be returned at runtime.
  • The derived class returned by the action must be known at runtime.

For example, suppose the action method:

  • Signature returns a Person type.
  • Can return a Student or Instructor type that derives from Person.

For the formatter to handle only Student objects, check the type of Object in the context object provided to the CanWriteResult method. When the action method returns IActionResult:

  • It's not necessary to use CanWriteResult.
  • The CanWriteType method receives the runtime type.

Override ReadRequestBodyAsync and WriteResponseBodyAsync

Deserialization or serialization is performed in ReadRequestBodyAsync or WriteResponseBodyAsync. The following example shows how to get services from the dependency injection container. Services can't be obtained from constructor parameters:

public override async Task WriteResponseBodyAsync(
    OutputFormatterWriteContext context, Encoding selectedEncoding)
{
    var httpContext = context.HttpContext;
    var serviceProvider = httpContext.RequestServices;

    var logger = serviceProvider.GetRequiredService<ILogger<VcardOutputFormatter>>();
    var buffer = new StringBuilder();

    if (context.Object is IEnumerable<Contact> contacts)
    {
        foreach (var contact in contacts)
        {
            FormatVcard(buffer, contact, logger);
        }
    }
    else
    {
        FormatVcard(buffer, (Contact)context.Object!, logger);
    }

    await httpContext.Response.WriteAsync(buffer.ToString(), selectedEncoding);
}

private static void FormatVcard(
    StringBuilder buffer, Contact contact, ILogger logger)
{
    buffer.AppendLine("BEGIN:VCARD");
    buffer.AppendLine("VERSION:2.1");
    buffer.AppendLine($"N:{contact.LastName};{contact.FirstName}");
    buffer.AppendLine($"FN:{contact.FirstName} {contact.LastName}");
    buffer.AppendLine($"UID:{contact.Id}");
    buffer.AppendLine("END:VCARD");

    logger.LogInformation("Writing {FirstName} {LastName}",
        contact.FirstName, contact.LastName);
}

Configure MVC to use a custom formatter

To use a custom formatter, add an instance of the formatter class to the MvcOptions.InputFormatters or MvcOptions.OutputFormatters collection:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);

builder.Services.AddControllers(options =>
{
    options.InputFormatters.Insert(0, new VcardInputFormatter());
    options.OutputFormatters.Insert(0, new VcardOutputFormatter());
});

Formatters are evaluated in the order they're inserted, where the first one takes precedence.

The complete VcardInputFormatter class

The following code shows the VcardInputFormatter class from the sample:

public class VcardInputFormatter : TextInputFormatter
{
    public VcardInputFormatter()
    {
        SupportedMediaTypes.Add(MediaTypeHeaderValue.Parse("text/vcard"));

        SupportedEncodings.Add(Encoding.UTF8);
        SupportedEncodings.Add(Encoding.Unicode);
    }

    protected override bool CanReadType(Type type)
        => type == typeof(Contact);

    public override async Task<InputFormatterResult> ReadRequestBodyAsync(
        InputFormatterContext context, Encoding effectiveEncoding)
    {
        var httpContext = context.HttpContext;
        var serviceProvider = httpContext.RequestServices;

        var logger = serviceProvider.GetRequiredService<ILogger<VcardInputFormatter>>();

        using var reader = new StreamReader(httpContext.Request.Body, effectiveEncoding);
        string? nameLine = null;

        try
        {
            await ReadLineAsync("BEGIN:VCARD", reader, context, logger);
            await ReadLineAsync("VERSION:", reader, context, logger);

            nameLine = await ReadLineAsync("N:", reader, context, logger);

            var split = nameLine.Split(";".ToCharArray());
            var contact = new Contact(FirstName: split[1], LastName: split[0].Substring(2));

            await ReadLineAsync("FN:", reader, context, logger);
            await ReadLineAsync("END:VCARD", reader, context, logger);

            logger.LogInformation("nameLine = {nameLine}", nameLine);

            return await InputFormatterResult.SuccessAsync(contact);
        }
        catch
        {
            logger.LogError("Read failed: nameLine = {nameLine}", nameLine);
            return await InputFormatterResult.FailureAsync();
        }
    }

    private static async Task<string> ReadLineAsync(
        string expectedText, StreamReader reader, InputFormatterContext context,
        ILogger logger)
    {
        var line = await reader.ReadLineAsync();

        if (line is null || !line.StartsWith(expectedText))
        {
            var errorMessage = $"Looked for '{expectedText}' and got '{line}'";

            context.ModelState.TryAddModelError(context.ModelName, errorMessage);
            logger.LogError(errorMessage);

            throw new Exception(errorMessage);
        }

        return line;
    }
}

Test the app

Run the sample app for this article, which implements basic vCard input and output formatters. The app reads and writes vCards similar to the following format:

BEGIN:VCARD
VERSION:2.1
N:Davolio;Nancy
FN:Nancy Davolio
END:VCARD

To see vCard output, run the app and send a Get request with Accept header text/vcard to https://localhost:<port>/api/contacts.

To add a vCard to the in-memory collection of contacts:

  • Send a Post request to /api/contacts with a tool like http-repl.
  • Set the Content-Type header to text/vcard.
  • Set vCard text in the body, formatted like the preceding example.

Additional resources

ASP.NET Core MVC supports data exchange in Web APIs using input and output formatters. Input formatters are used by Model Binding. Output formatters are used to format responses.

The framework provides built-in input and output formatters for JSON and XML. It provides a built-in output formatter for plain text, but doesn't provide an input formatter for plain text.

This article shows how to add support for additional formats by creating custom formatters. For an example of a custom plain text input formatter, see TextPlainInputFormatter on GitHub.

View or download sample code (how to download)

When to use a custom formatter

Use a custom formatter to add support for a content type that isn't handled by the built-in formatters.

Overview of how to create a custom formatter

To create a custom formatter:

  • For serializing data sent to the client, create an output formatter class.
  • For deserializing data received from the client, create an input formatter class.
  • Add instances of formatter classes to the InputFormatters and OutputFormatters collections in MvcOptions.

Create a custom formatter

To create a formatter:

The following code shows the VcardOutputFormatter class from the sample:

public class VcardOutputFormatter : TextOutputFormatter
{
    public VcardOutputFormatter()
    {
        SupportedMediaTypes.Add(MediaTypeHeaderValue.Parse("text/vcard"));

        SupportedEncodings.Add(Encoding.UTF8);
        SupportedEncodings.Add(Encoding.Unicode);
    }

    protected override bool CanWriteType(Type type)
    {
        return typeof(Contact).IsAssignableFrom(type) ||
            typeof(IEnumerable<Contact>).IsAssignableFrom(type);
    }

    public override async Task WriteResponseBodyAsync(
        OutputFormatterWriteContext context, Encoding selectedEncoding)
    {
        var httpContext = context.HttpContext;
        var serviceProvider = httpContext.RequestServices;

        var logger = serviceProvider.GetRequiredService<ILogger<VcardOutputFormatter>>();
        var buffer = new StringBuilder();

        if (context.Object is IEnumerable<Contact> contacts)
        {
            foreach (var contact in contacts)
            {
                FormatVcard(buffer, contact, logger);
            }
        }
        else
        {
            FormatVcard(buffer, (Contact)context.Object, logger);
        }

        await httpContext.Response.WriteAsync(buffer.ToString(), selectedEncoding);
    }

    private static void FormatVcard(
        StringBuilder buffer, Contact contact, ILogger logger)
    {
        buffer.AppendLine("BEGIN:VCARD");
        buffer.AppendLine("VERSION:2.1");
        buffer.AppendLine($"N:{contact.LastName};{contact.FirstName}");
        buffer.AppendLine($"FN:{contact.FirstName} {contact.LastName}");
        buffer.AppendLine($"UID:{contact.Id}");
        buffer.AppendLine("END:VCARD");

        logger.LogInformation("Writing {FirstName} {LastName}",
            contact.FirstName, contact.LastName);
    }
}

Derive from the appropriate base class

For text media types (for example, vCard), derive from the TextInputFormatter or TextOutputFormatter base class:

public class VcardOutputFormatter : TextOutputFormatter

For binary types, derive from the InputFormatter or OutputFormatter base class.

Specify supported media types and encodings

In the constructor, specify supported media types and encodings by adding to the SupportedMediaTypes and SupportedEncodings collections:

public VcardOutputFormatter()
{
    SupportedMediaTypes.Add(MediaTypeHeaderValue.Parse("text/vcard"));

    SupportedEncodings.Add(Encoding.UTF8);
    SupportedEncodings.Add(Encoding.Unicode);
}

A formatter class can not use constructor injection for its dependencies. For example, ILogger<VcardOutputFormatter> can't be added as a parameter to the constructor. To access services, use the context object that gets passed in to the methods. A code example in this article and the sample show how to do this.

Override CanReadType and CanWriteType

Specify the type to deserialize into or serialize from by overriding the CanReadType or CanWriteType methods. For example, to create vCard text from a Contact type and vice versa:

protected override bool CanWriteType(Type type)
{
    return typeof(Contact).IsAssignableFrom(type) ||
        typeof(IEnumerable<Contact>).IsAssignableFrom(type);
}

The CanWriteResult method

In some scenarios, CanWriteResult must be overridden rather than CanWriteType. Use CanWriteResult if the following conditions are true:

  • The action method returns a model class.
  • There are derived classes that might be returned at runtime.
  • The derived class returned by the action must be known at runtime.

For example, suppose the action method:

  • Signature returns a Person type.
  • Can return a Student or Instructor type that derives from Person.

For the formatter to handle only Student objects, check the type of Object in the context object provided to the CanWriteResult method. When the action method returns IActionResult:

  • It's not necessary to use CanWriteResult.
  • The CanWriteType method receives the runtime type.

Override ReadRequestBodyAsync and WriteResponseBodyAsync

Deserialization or serialization is performed in ReadRequestBodyAsync or WriteResponseBodyAsync. The following example shows how to get services from the dependency injection container. Services can't be obtained from constructor parameters:

public override async Task WriteResponseBodyAsync(
    OutputFormatterWriteContext context, Encoding selectedEncoding)
{
    var httpContext = context.HttpContext;
    var serviceProvider = httpContext.RequestServices;

    var logger = serviceProvider.GetRequiredService<ILogger<VcardOutputFormatter>>();
    var buffer = new StringBuilder();

    if (context.Object is IEnumerable<Contact> contacts)
    {
        foreach (var contact in contacts)
        {
            FormatVcard(buffer, contact, logger);
        }
    }
    else
    {
        FormatVcard(buffer, (Contact)context.Object, logger);
    }

    await httpContext.Response.WriteAsync(buffer.ToString(), selectedEncoding);
}

private static void FormatVcard(
    StringBuilder buffer, Contact contact, ILogger logger)
{
    buffer.AppendLine("BEGIN:VCARD");
    buffer.AppendLine("VERSION:2.1");
    buffer.AppendLine($"N:{contact.LastName};{contact.FirstName}");
    buffer.AppendLine($"FN:{contact.FirstName} {contact.LastName}");
    buffer.AppendLine($"UID:{contact.Id}");
    buffer.AppendLine("END:VCARD");

    logger.LogInformation("Writing {FirstName} {LastName}",
        contact.FirstName, contact.LastName);
}

Configure MVC to use a custom formatter

To use a custom formatter, add an instance of the formatter class to the MvcOptions.InputFormatters or MvcOptions.OutputFormatters collection:

public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
    services.AddControllers(options =>
    {
        options.InputFormatters.Insert(0, new VcardInputFormatter());
        options.OutputFormatters.Insert(0, new VcardOutputFormatter());
    });
}

Formatters are evaluated in the order you insert them. The first one takes precedence.

The complete VcardInputFormatter class

The following code shows the VcardInputFormatter class from the sample:

public class VcardInputFormatter : TextInputFormatter
{
    public VcardInputFormatter()
    {
        SupportedMediaTypes.Add(MediaTypeHeaderValue.Parse("text/vcard"));

        SupportedEncodings.Add(Encoding.UTF8);
        SupportedEncodings.Add(Encoding.Unicode);
    }

    protected override bool CanReadType(Type type)
    {
        return type == typeof(Contact);
    }

    public override async Task<InputFormatterResult> ReadRequestBodyAsync(
        InputFormatterContext context, Encoding effectiveEncoding)
    {
        var httpContext = context.HttpContext;
        var serviceProvider = httpContext.RequestServices;

        var logger = serviceProvider.GetRequiredService<ILogger<VcardInputFormatter>>();

        using var reader = new StreamReader(httpContext.Request.Body, effectiveEncoding);
        string nameLine = null;

        try
        {
            await ReadLineAsync("BEGIN:VCARD", reader, context, logger);
            await ReadLineAsync("VERSION:", reader, context, logger);

            nameLine = await ReadLineAsync("N:", reader, context, logger);

            var split = nameLine.Split(";".ToCharArray());
            var contact = new Contact
            {
                LastName = split[0].Substring(2),
                FirstName = split[1]
            };

            await ReadLineAsync("FN:", reader, context, logger);
            await ReadLineAsync("END:VCARD", reader, context, logger);

            logger.LogInformation("nameLine = {nameLine}", nameLine);

            return await InputFormatterResult.SuccessAsync(contact);
        }
        catch
        {
            logger.LogError("Read failed: nameLine = {nameLine}", nameLine);
            return await InputFormatterResult.FailureAsync();
        }
    }

    private static async Task<string> ReadLineAsync(
        string expectedText, StreamReader reader, InputFormatterContext context,
        ILogger logger)
    {
        var line = await reader.ReadLineAsync();

        if (!line.StartsWith(expectedText))
        {
            var errorMessage = $"Looked for '{expectedText}' and got '{line}'";

            context.ModelState.TryAddModelError(context.ModelName, errorMessage);
            logger.LogError(errorMessage);

            throw new Exception(errorMessage);
        }

        return line;
    }
}

Test the app

Run the sample app for this article, which implements basic vCard input and output formatters. The app reads and writes vCards similar to the following format:

BEGIN:VCARD
VERSION:2.1
N:Davolio;Nancy
FN:Nancy Davolio
END:VCARD

To see vCard output, run the app and send a Get request with Accept header text/vcard to https://localhost:5001/api/contacts.

To add a vCard to the in-memory collection of contacts:

  • Send a Post request to /api/contacts with a tool like Postman.
  • Set the Content-Type header to text/vcard.
  • Set vCard text in the body, formatted like the preceding example.

Additional resources