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ASP.NET Core Middleware

Note

This isn't the latest version of this article. For the current release, see the .NET 9 version of this article.

Warning

This version of ASP.NET Core is no longer supported. For more information, see .NET and .NET Core Support Policy. For the current release, see the .NET 8 version of this article.

Important

This information relates to a pre-release product that may be substantially modified before it's commercially released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.

For the current release, see the .NET 9 version of this article.

By Rick Anderson and Steve Smith

Middleware is software that's assembled into an app pipeline to handle requests and responses. Each component:

  • Chooses whether to pass the request to the next component in the pipeline.
  • Can perform work before and after the next component in the pipeline.

Request delegates are used to build the request pipeline. The request delegates handle each HTTP request.

Request delegates are configured using Run, Map, and Use extension methods. An individual request delegate can be specified in-line as an anonymous method (called in-line middleware), or it can be defined in a reusable class. These reusable classes and in-line anonymous methods are middleware, also called middleware components. Each middleware component in the request pipeline is responsible for invoking the next component in the pipeline or short-circuiting the pipeline. When a middleware short-circuits, it's called a terminal middleware because it prevents further middleware from processing the request.

Migrate HTTP handlers and modules to ASP.NET Core middleware explains the difference between request pipelines in ASP.NET Core and ASP.NET 4.x and provides additional middleware samples.

Middleware code analysis

ASP.NET Core includes many compiler platform analyzers that inspect application code for quality. For more information, see Code analysis in ASP.NET Core apps

Create a middleware pipeline with WebApplication

The ASP.NET Core request pipeline consists of a sequence of request delegates, called one after the other. The following diagram demonstrates the concept. The thread of execution follows the black arrows.

Request processing pattern showing a request arriving, processing through three middlewares, and the response leaving the app. Each middleware runs its logic and hands off the request to the next middleware at the next() statement. After the third middleware processes the request, the request passes back through the prior two middlewares in reverse order for additional processing after their next() statements before leaving the app as a response to the client.

Each delegate can perform operations before and after the next delegate. Exception-handling delegates should be called early in the pipeline, so they can catch exceptions that occur in later stages of the pipeline.

The simplest possible ASP.NET Core app sets up a single request delegate that handles all requests. This case doesn't include an actual request pipeline. Instead, a single anonymous function is called in response to every HTTP request.

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello world!");
});

app.Run();

Chain multiple request delegates together with Use. The next parameter represents the next delegate in the pipeline. You can short-circuit the pipeline by not calling the next parameter. You can typically perform actions both before and after the next delegate, as the following example demonstrates:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.Use(async (context, next) =>
{
    // Do work that can write to the Response.
    await next.Invoke();
    // Do logging or other work that doesn't write to the Response.
});

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from 2nd delegate.");
});

app.Run();

Short-circuiting the request pipeline

When a delegate doesn't pass a request to the next delegate, it's called short-circuiting the request pipeline. Short-circuiting is often desirable because it avoids unnecessary work. For example, Static File Middleware can act as a terminal middleware by processing a request for a static file and short-circuiting the rest of the pipeline. Middleware added to the pipeline before the middleware that terminates further processing still processes code after their next.Invoke statements. However, see the following warning about attempting to write to a response that has already been sent.

Warning

Don't call next.Invoke during or after the response has been sent to the client. After an HttpResponse has started, changes result in an exception. For example, setting headers and a status code throw an exception after the response starts. Writing to the response body after calling next:

  • May cause a protocol violation, such as writing more than the stated Content-Length.
  • May corrupt the body format, such as writing an HTML footer to a CSS file.

HasStarted is a useful hint to indicate if headers have been sent or the body has been written to.

For more information, see Short-circuit middleware after routing.

Run delegates

Run delegates don't receive a next parameter. The first Run delegate is always terminal and terminates the pipeline. Run is a convention. Some middleware components may expose Run[Middleware] methods that run at the end of the pipeline:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.Use(async (context, next) =>
{
    // Do work that can write to the Response.
    await next.Invoke();
    // Do logging or other work that doesn't write to the Response.
});

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from 2nd delegate.");
});

app.Run();

If you would like to see code comments translated to languages other than English, let us know in this GitHub discussion issue.

In the preceding example, the Run delegate writes "Hello from 2nd delegate." to the response and then terminates the pipeline. If another Use or Run delegate is added after the Run delegate, it's not called.

Prefer app.Use overload that requires passing the context to next

The non-allocating app.Use extension method:

  • Requires passing the context to next.
  • Saves two internal per-request allocations that are required when using the other overload.

For more information, see this GitHub issue.

Middleware order

The following diagram shows the complete request processing pipeline for ASP.NET Core MVC and Razor Pages apps. You can see how, in a typical app, existing middlewares are ordered and where custom middlewares are added. You have full control over how to reorder existing middlewares or inject new custom middlewares as necessary for your scenarios.

ASP.NET Core middleware pipeline

The Endpoint middleware in the preceding diagram executes the filter pipeline for the corresponding app type—MVC or Razor Pages.

The Routing middleware in the preceding diagram is shown following Static Files. This is the order that the project templates implement by explicitly calling app.UseRouting. If you don't call app.UseRouting, the Routing middleware runs at the beginning of the pipeline by default. For more information, see Routing.

ASP.NET Core filter pipeline

The order that middleware components are added in the Program.cs file defines the order in which the middleware components are invoked on requests and the reverse order for the response. The order is critical for security, performance, and functionality.

The following highlighted code in Program.cs adds security-related middleware components in the typical recommended order:

using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Identity;
using Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore;
using WebMiddleware.Data;

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);

var connectionString = builder.Configuration.GetConnectionString("DefaultConnection")
    ?? throw new InvalidOperationException("Connection string 'DefaultConnection' not found.");
builder.Services.AddDbContext<ApplicationDbContext>(options =>
    options.UseSqlServer(connectionString));
builder.Services.AddDatabaseDeveloperPageExceptionFilter();

builder.Services.AddDefaultIdentity<IdentityUser>(options => options.SignIn.RequireConfirmedAccount = true)
    .AddEntityFrameworkStores<ApplicationDbContext>();
builder.Services.AddRazorPages();
builder.Services.AddControllersWithViews();

var app = builder.Build();

if (app.Environment.IsDevelopment())
{
    app.UseMigrationsEndPoint();
}
else
{
    app.UseExceptionHandler("/Error");
    app.UseHsts();
}

app.UseHttpsRedirection();
app.UseStaticFiles();
// app.UseCookiePolicy();

app.UseRouting();
// app.UseRateLimiter();
// app.UseRequestLocalization();
// app.UseCors();

app.UseAuthentication();
app.UseAuthorization();
// app.UseSession();
// app.UseResponseCompression();
// app.UseResponseCaching();

app.MapRazorPages();
app.MapDefaultControllerRoute();

app.Run();

In the preceding code:

  • Middleware that is not added when creating a new web app with individual users accounts is commented out.
  • Not every middleware appears in this exact order, but many do. For example:
    • UseCors, UseAuthentication, and UseAuthorization must appear in the order shown.
    • UseCors currently must appear before UseResponseCaching. This requirement is explained in GitHub issue dotnet/aspnetcore #23218.
    • UseRequestLocalization must appear before any middleware that might check the request culture, for example, app.UseStaticFiles().
    • UseRateLimiter must be called after UseRouting when rate limiting endpoint specific APIs are used. For example, if the [EnableRateLimiting] attribute is used, UseRateLimiter must be called after UseRouting. When calling only global limiters, UseRateLimiter can be called before UseRouting.

In some scenarios, middleware has different ordering. For example, caching and compression ordering is scenario specific, and there are multiple valid orderings. For example:

app.UseResponseCaching();
app.UseResponseCompression();

With the preceding code, CPU usage could be reduced by caching the compressed response, but you might end up caching multiple representations of a resource using different compression algorithms such as Gzip or Brotli.

The following ordering combines static files to allow caching compressed static files:

app.UseResponseCaching();
app.UseResponseCompression();
app.UseStaticFiles();

The following Program.cs code adds middleware components for common app scenarios:

  1. Exception/error handling
    • When the app runs in the Development environment:
    • When the app runs in the Production environment:
      • Exception Handler Middleware (UseExceptionHandler) catches exceptions thrown in the following middlewares.
      • HTTP Strict Transport Security Protocol (HSTS) Middleware (UseHsts) adds the Strict-Transport-Security header.
  2. HTTPS Redirection Middleware (UseHttpsRedirection) redirects HTTP requests to HTTPS.
  3. Static File Middleware (UseStaticFiles) returns static files and short-circuits further request processing.
  4. Cookie Policy Middleware (UseCookiePolicy) conforms the app to the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) regulations.
  5. Routing Middleware (UseRouting) to route requests.
  6. Authentication Middleware (UseAuthentication) attempts to authenticate the user before they're allowed access to secure resources.
  7. Authorization Middleware (UseAuthorization) authorizes a user to access secure resources.
  8. Session Middleware (UseSession) establishes and maintains session state. If the app uses session state, call Session Middleware after Cookie Policy Middleware and before MVC Middleware.
  9. Endpoint Routing Middleware (UseEndpoints with MapRazorPages) to add Razor Pages endpoints to the request pipeline.
if (env.IsDevelopment())
{
    app.UseDeveloperExceptionPage();
    app.UseDatabaseErrorPage();
}
else
{
    app.UseExceptionHandler("/Error");
    app.UseHsts();
}
app.UseHttpsRedirection();
app.UseStaticFiles();
app.UseCookiePolicy();
app.UseRouting();
app.UseAuthentication();
app.UseAuthorization();
app.UseSession();
app.MapRazorPages();

In the preceding example code, each middleware extension method is exposed on WebApplicationBuilder through the Microsoft.AspNetCore.Builder namespace.

UseExceptionHandler is the first middleware component added to the pipeline. Therefore, the Exception Handler Middleware catches any exceptions that occur in later calls.

Static File Middleware is called early in the pipeline so that it can handle requests and short-circuit without going through the remaining components. The Static File Middleware provides no authorization checks. Any files served by Static File Middleware, including those under wwwroot, are publicly available. For an approach to secure static files, see Static files in ASP.NET Core.

If the request isn't handled by the Static File Middleware, it's passed on to the Authentication Middleware (UseAuthentication), which performs authentication. Authentication doesn't short-circuit unauthenticated requests. Although Authentication Middleware authenticates requests, authorization (and rejection) occurs only after MVC selects a specific Razor Page or MVC controller and action.

The following example demonstrates a middleware order where requests for static files are handled by Static File Middleware before Response Compression Middleware. Static files aren't compressed with this middleware order. The Razor Pages responses can be compressed.

// Static files aren't compressed by Static File Middleware.
app.UseStaticFiles();

app.UseRouting();

app.UseResponseCompression();

app.MapRazorPages();

For information about Single Page Applications, see Overview of Single Page Apps (SPAs) in ASP.NET Core.

UseCors and UseStaticFiles order

The order for calling UseCors and UseStaticFiles depends on the app. For more information, see UseCors and UseStaticFiles order

Forwarded Headers Middleware order

Forwarded Headers Middleware should run before other middleware. This ordering ensures that the middleware relying on forwarded headers information can consume the header values for processing. To run Forwarded Headers Middleware after diagnostics and error handling middleware, see Forwarded Headers Middleware order.

Branch the middleware pipeline

Map extensions are used as a convention for branching the pipeline. Map branches the request pipeline based on matches of the given request path. If the request path starts with the given path, the branch is executed.

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.Map("/map1", HandleMapTest1);

app.Map("/map2", HandleMapTest2);

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from non-Map delegate.");
});

app.Run();

static void HandleMapTest1(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    app.Run(async context =>
    {
        await context.Response.WriteAsync("Map Test 1");
    });
}

static void HandleMapTest2(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    app.Run(async context =>
    {
        await context.Response.WriteAsync("Map Test 2");
    });
}

The following table shows the requests and responses from http://localhost:1234 using the preceding code.

Request Response
localhost:1234 Hello from non-Map delegate.
localhost:1234/map1 Map Test 1
localhost:1234/map2 Map Test 2
localhost:1234/map3 Hello from non-Map delegate.

When Map is used, the matched path segments are removed from HttpRequest.Path and appended to HttpRequest.PathBase for each request.

Map supports nesting, for example:

app.Map("/level1", level1App => {
    level1App.Map("/level2a", level2AApp => {
        // "/level1/level2a" processing
    });
    level1App.Map("/level2b", level2BApp => {
        // "/level1/level2b" processing
    });
});

Map can also match multiple segments at once:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.Map("/map1/seg1", HandleMultiSeg);

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from non-Map delegate.");
});

app.Run();

static void HandleMultiSeg(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    app.Run(async context =>
    {
        await context.Response.WriteAsync("Map Test 1");
    });
}

MapWhen branches the request pipeline based on the result of the given predicate. Any predicate of type Func<HttpContext, bool> can be used to map requests to a new branch of the pipeline. In the following example, a predicate is used to detect the presence of a query string variable branch:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.MapWhen(context => context.Request.Query.ContainsKey("branch"), HandleBranch);

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from non-Map delegate.");
});

app.Run();

static void HandleBranch(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    app.Run(async context =>
    {
        var branchVer = context.Request.Query["branch"];
        await context.Response.WriteAsync($"Branch used = {branchVer}");
    });
}

The following table shows the requests and responses from http://localhost:1234 using the previous code:

Request Response
localhost:1234 Hello from non-Map delegate.
localhost:1234/?branch=main Branch used = main

UseWhen also branches the request pipeline based on the result of the given predicate. Unlike with MapWhen, this branch is rejoined to the main pipeline if it doesn't short-circuit or contain a terminal middleware:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.UseWhen(context => context.Request.Query.ContainsKey("branch"),
    appBuilder => HandleBranchAndRejoin(appBuilder));

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from non-Map delegate.");
});

app.Run();

void HandleBranchAndRejoin(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    var logger = app.ApplicationServices.GetRequiredService<ILogger<Program>>(); 

    app.Use(async (context, next) =>
    {
        var branchVer = context.Request.Query["branch"];
        logger.LogInformation("Branch used = {branchVer}", branchVer);

        // Do work that doesn't write to the Response.
        await next();
        // Do other work that doesn't write to the Response.
    });
}

In the preceding example, a response of Hello from non-Map delegate. is written for all requests. If the request includes a query string variable branch, its value is logged before the main pipeline is rejoined.

Built-in middleware

ASP.NET Core ships with the following middleware components. The Order column provides notes on middleware placement in the request processing pipeline and under what conditions the middleware may terminate request processing. When a middleware short-circuits the request processing pipeline and prevents further downstream middleware from processing a request, it's called a terminal middleware. For more information on short-circuiting, see the Create a middleware pipeline with WebApplication section.

Middleware Description Order
Authentication Provides authentication support. Before HttpContext.User is needed. Terminal for OAuth callbacks.
Authorization Provides authorization support. Immediately after the Authentication Middleware.
Cookie Policy Tracks consent from users for storing personal information and enforces minimum standards for cookie fields, such as secure and SameSite. Before middleware that issues cookies. Examples: Authentication, Session, MVC (TempData).
CORS Configures Cross-Origin Resource Sharing. Before components that use CORS. UseCors currently must go before UseResponseCaching due to this bug.
DeveloperExceptionPage Generates a page with error information that is intended for use only in the Development environment. Before components that generate errors. The project templates automatically register this middleware as the first middleware in the pipeline when the environment is Development.
Diagnostics Several separate middlewares that provide a developer exception page, exception handling, status code pages, and the default web page for new apps. Before components that generate errors. Terminal for exceptions or serving the default web page for new apps.
Forwarded Headers Forwards proxied headers onto the current request. Before components that consume the updated fields. Examples: scheme, host, client IP, method.
Health Check Checks the health of an ASP.NET Core app and its dependencies, such as checking database availability. Terminal if a request matches a health check endpoint.
Header Propagation Propagates HTTP headers from the incoming request to the outgoing HTTP Client requests.
HTTP Logging Logs HTTP Requests and Responses. At the beginning of the middleware pipeline.
HTTP Method Override Allows an incoming POST request to override the method. Before components that consume the updated method.
HTTPS Redirection Redirect all HTTP requests to HTTPS. Before components that consume the URL.
HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) Security enhancement middleware that adds a special response header. Before responses are sent and after components that modify requests. Examples: Forwarded Headers, URL Rewriting.
MVC Processes requests with MVC/Razor Pages. Terminal if a request matches a route.
OWIN Interop with OWIN-based apps, servers, and middleware. Terminal if the OWIN Middleware fully processes the request.
Output Caching Provides support for caching responses based on configuration. Before components that require caching. UseRouting must come before UseOutputCaching. UseCORS must come before UseOutputCaching.
Response Caching Provides support for caching responses. This requires client participation to work. Use output caching for complete server control. Before components that require caching. UseCORS must come before UseResponseCaching. Is typically not beneficial for UI apps such as Razor Pages because browsers generally set request headers that prevent caching. Output caching benefits UI apps.
Request Decompression Provides support for decompressing requests. Before components that read the request body.
Response Compression Provides support for compressing responses. Before components that require compression.
Request Localization Provides localization support. Before localization sensitive components. Must appear after Routing Middleware when using RouteDataRequestCultureProvider.
Request Timeouts Provides support for configuring request timeouts, global and per endpoint. UseRequestTimeouts must come after UseExceptionHandler, UseDeveloperExceptionPage, and UseRouting.
Endpoint Routing Defines and constrains request routes. Terminal for matching routes.
SPA Handles all requests from this point in the middleware chain by returning the default page for the Single Page Application (SPA) Late in the chain, so that other middleware for serving static files, MVC actions, etc., takes precedence.
Session Provides support for managing user sessions. Before components that require Session.
Static Files Provides support for serving static files and directory browsing. Terminal if a request matches a file.
URL Rewrite Provides support for rewriting URLs and redirecting requests. Before components that consume the URL.
W3CLogging Generates server access logs in the W3C Extended Log File Format. At the beginning of the middleware pipeline.
WebSockets Enables the WebSockets protocol. Before components that are required to accept WebSocket requests.

Additional resources

By Rick Anderson and Steve Smith

Middleware is software that's assembled into an app pipeline to handle requests and responses. Each component:

  • Chooses whether to pass the request to the next component in the pipeline.
  • Can perform work before and after the next component in the pipeline.

Request delegates are used to build the request pipeline. The request delegates handle each HTTP request.

Request delegates are configured using Run, Map, and Use extension methods. An individual request delegate can be specified in-line as an anonymous method (called in-line middleware), or it can be defined in a reusable class. These reusable classes and in-line anonymous methods are middleware, also called middleware components. Each middleware component in the request pipeline is responsible for invoking the next component in the pipeline or short-circuiting the pipeline. When a middleware short-circuits, it's called a terminal middleware because it prevents further middleware from processing the request.

Migrate HTTP handlers and modules to ASP.NET Core middleware explains the difference between request pipelines in ASP.NET Core and ASP.NET 4.x and provides additional middleware samples.

Middleware code analysis

ASP.NET Core includes many compiler platform analyzers that inspect application code for quality. For more information, see Code analysis in ASP.NET Core apps

Create a middleware pipeline with WebApplication

The ASP.NET Core request pipeline consists of a sequence of request delegates, called one after the other. The following diagram demonstrates the concept. The thread of execution follows the black arrows.

Request processing pattern showing a request arriving, processing through three middlewares, and the response leaving the app. Each middleware runs its logic and hands off the request to the next middleware at the next() statement. After the third middleware processes the request, the request passes back through the prior two middlewares in reverse order for additional processing after their next() statements before leaving the app as a response to the client.

Each delegate can perform operations before and after the next delegate. Exception-handling delegates should be called early in the pipeline, so they can catch exceptions that occur in later stages of the pipeline.

The simplest possible ASP.NET Core app sets up a single request delegate that handles all requests. This case doesn't include an actual request pipeline. Instead, a single anonymous function is called in response to every HTTP request.

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello world!");
});

app.Run();

Chain multiple request delegates together with Use. The next parameter represents the next delegate in the pipeline. You can short-circuit the pipeline by not calling the next parameter. You can typically perform actions both before and after the next delegate, as the following example demonstrates:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.Use(async (context, next) =>
{
    // Do work that can write to the Response.
    await next.Invoke();
    // Do logging or other work that doesn't write to the Response.
});

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from 2nd delegate.");
});

app.Run();

When a delegate doesn't pass a request to the next delegate, it's called short-circuiting the request pipeline. Short-circuiting is often desirable because it avoids unnecessary work. For example, Static File Middleware can act as a terminal middleware by processing a request for a static file and short-circuiting the rest of the pipeline. Middleware added to the pipeline before the middleware that terminates further processing still processes code after their next.Invoke statements. However, see the following warning about attempting to write to a response that has already been sent.

Warning

Don't call next.Invoke after the response has been sent to the client. Changes to HttpResponse after the response has started throw an exception. For example, setting headers and a status code throw an exception. Writing to the response body after calling next:

  • May cause a protocol violation. For example, writing more than the stated Content-Length.
  • May corrupt the body format. For example, writing an HTML footer to a CSS file.

HasStarted is a useful hint to indicate if headers have been sent or the body has been written to.

Run delegates don't receive a next parameter. The first Run delegate is always terminal and terminates the pipeline. Run is a convention. Some middleware components may expose Run[Middleware] methods that run at the end of the pipeline:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.Use(async (context, next) =>
{
    // Do work that can write to the Response.
    await next.Invoke();
    // Do logging or other work that doesn't write to the Response.
});

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from 2nd delegate.");
});

app.Run();

If you would like to see code comments translated to languages other than English, let us know in this GitHub discussion issue.

In the preceding example, the Run delegate writes "Hello from 2nd delegate." to the response and then terminates the pipeline. If another Use or Run delegate is added after the Run delegate, it's not called.

Prefer app.Use overload that requires passing the context to next

The non-allocating app.Use extension method:

  • Requires passing the context to next.
  • Saves two internal per-request allocations that are required when using the other overload.

For more information, see this GitHub issue.

Middleware order

The following diagram shows the complete request processing pipeline for ASP.NET Core MVC and Razor Pages apps. You can see how, in a typical app, existing middlewares are ordered and where custom middlewares are added. You have full control over how to reorder existing middlewares or inject new custom middlewares as necessary for your scenarios.

ASP.NET Core middleware pipeline

The Endpoint middleware in the preceding diagram executes the filter pipeline for the corresponding app type—MVC or Razor Pages.

The Routing middleware in the preceding diagram is shown following Static Files. This is the order that the project templates implement by explicitly calling app.UseRouting. If you don't call app.UseRouting, the Routing middleware runs at the beginning of the pipeline by default. For more information, see Routing.

ASP.NET Core filter pipeline

The order that middleware components are added in the Program.cs file defines the order in which the middleware components are invoked on requests and the reverse order for the response. The order is critical for security, performance, and functionality.

The following highlighted code in Program.cs adds security-related middleware components in the typical recommended order:

using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Identity;
using Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore;
using WebMiddleware.Data;

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);

var connectionString = builder.Configuration.GetConnectionString("DefaultConnection")
    ?? throw new InvalidOperationException("Connection string 'DefaultConnection' not found.");
builder.Services.AddDbContext<ApplicationDbContext>(options =>
    options.UseSqlServer(connectionString));
builder.Services.AddDatabaseDeveloperPageExceptionFilter();

builder.Services.AddDefaultIdentity<IdentityUser>(options => options.SignIn.RequireConfirmedAccount = true)
    .AddEntityFrameworkStores<ApplicationDbContext>();
builder.Services.AddRazorPages();
builder.Services.AddControllersWithViews();

var app = builder.Build();

if (app.Environment.IsDevelopment())
{
    app.UseMigrationsEndPoint();
}
else
{
    app.UseExceptionHandler("/Error");
    app.UseHsts();
}

app.UseHttpsRedirection();
app.UseStaticFiles();
// app.UseCookiePolicy();

app.UseRouting();
// app.UseRateLimiter();
// app.UseRequestLocalization();
// app.UseCors();

app.UseAuthentication();
app.UseAuthorization();
// app.UseSession();
// app.UseResponseCompression();
// app.UseResponseCaching();

app.MapRazorPages();
app.MapDefaultControllerRoute();

app.Run();

In the preceding code:

  • Middleware that is not added when creating a new web app with individual users accounts is commented out.
  • Not every middleware appears in this exact order, but many do. For example:
    • UseCors, UseAuthentication, and UseAuthorization must appear in the order shown.
    • UseCors currently must appear before UseResponseCaching. This requirement is explained in GitHub issue dotnet/aspnetcore #23218.
    • UseRequestLocalization must appear before any middleware that might check the request culture, for example, app.UseStaticFiles().
    • UseRateLimiter must be called after UseRouting when rate limiting endpoint specific APIs are used. For example, if the [EnableRateLimiting] attribute is used, UseRateLimiter must be called after UseRouting. When calling only global limiters, UseRateLimiter can be called before UseRouting.

In some scenarios, middleware has different ordering. For example, caching and compression ordering is scenario specific, and there are multiple valid orderings. For example:

app.UseResponseCaching();
app.UseResponseCompression();

With the preceding code, CPU usage could be reduced by caching the compressed response, but you might end up caching multiple representations of a resource using different compression algorithms such as Gzip or Brotli.

The following ordering combines static files to allow caching compressed static files:

app.UseResponseCaching();
app.UseResponseCompression();
app.UseStaticFiles();

The following Program.cs code adds middleware components for common app scenarios:

  1. Exception/error handling
    • When the app runs in the Development environment:
    • When the app runs in the Production environment:
      • Exception Handler Middleware (UseExceptionHandler) catches exceptions thrown in the following middlewares.
      • HTTP Strict Transport Security Protocol (HSTS) Middleware (UseHsts) adds the Strict-Transport-Security header.
  2. HTTPS Redirection Middleware (UseHttpsRedirection) redirects HTTP requests to HTTPS.
  3. Static File Middleware (UseStaticFiles) returns static files and short-circuits further request processing.
  4. Cookie Policy Middleware (UseCookiePolicy) conforms the app to the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) regulations.
  5. Routing Middleware (UseRouting) to route requests.
  6. Authentication Middleware (UseAuthentication) attempts to authenticate the user before they're allowed access to secure resources.
  7. Authorization Middleware (UseAuthorization) authorizes a user to access secure resources.
  8. Session Middleware (UseSession) establishes and maintains session state. If the app uses session state, call Session Middleware after Cookie Policy Middleware and before MVC Middleware.
  9. Endpoint Routing Middleware (UseEndpoints with MapRazorPages) to add Razor Pages endpoints to the request pipeline.
if (env.IsDevelopment())
{
    app.UseDeveloperExceptionPage();
    app.UseDatabaseErrorPage();
}
else
{
    app.UseExceptionHandler("/Error");
    app.UseHsts();
}
app.UseHttpsRedirection();
app.UseStaticFiles();
app.UseCookiePolicy();
app.UseRouting();
app.UseAuthentication();
app.UseAuthorization();
app.UseSession();
app.MapRazorPages();

In the preceding example code, each middleware extension method is exposed on WebApplicationBuilder through the Microsoft.AspNetCore.Builder namespace.

UseExceptionHandler is the first middleware component added to the pipeline. Therefore, the Exception Handler Middleware catches any exceptions that occur in later calls.

Static File Middleware is called early in the pipeline so that it can handle requests and short-circuit without going through the remaining components. The Static File Middleware provides no authorization checks. Any files served by Static File Middleware, including those under wwwroot, are publicly available. For an approach to secure static files, see Static files in ASP.NET Core.

If the request isn't handled by the Static File Middleware, it's passed on to the Authentication Middleware (UseAuthentication), which performs authentication. Authentication doesn't short-circuit unauthenticated requests. Although Authentication Middleware authenticates requests, authorization (and rejection) occurs only after MVC selects a specific Razor Page or MVC controller and action.

The following example demonstrates a middleware order where requests for static files are handled by Static File Middleware before Response Compression Middleware. Static files aren't compressed with this middleware order. The Razor Pages responses can be compressed.

// Static files aren't compressed by Static File Middleware.
app.UseStaticFiles();

app.UseRouting();

app.UseResponseCompression();

app.MapRazorPages();

For information about Single Page Applications, see the guides for the React and Angular project templates.

UseCors and UseStaticFiles order

The order for calling UseCors and UseStaticFiles depends on the app. For more information, see UseCors and UseStaticFiles order

Forwarded Headers Middleware order

Forwarded Headers Middleware should run before other middleware. This ordering ensures that the middleware relying on forwarded headers information can consume the header values for processing. To run Forwarded Headers Middleware after diagnostics and error handling middleware, see Forwarded Headers Middleware order.

Branch the middleware pipeline

Map extensions are used as a convention for branching the pipeline. Map branches the request pipeline based on matches of the given request path. If the request path starts with the given path, the branch is executed.

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.Map("/map1", HandleMapTest1);

app.Map("/map2", HandleMapTest2);

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from non-Map delegate.");
});

app.Run();

static void HandleMapTest1(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    app.Run(async context =>
    {
        await context.Response.WriteAsync("Map Test 1");
    });
}

static void HandleMapTest2(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    app.Run(async context =>
    {
        await context.Response.WriteAsync("Map Test 2");
    });
}

The following table shows the requests and responses from http://localhost:1234 using the preceding code.

Request Response
localhost:1234 Hello from non-Map delegate.
localhost:1234/map1 Map Test 1
localhost:1234/map2 Map Test 2
localhost:1234/map3 Hello from non-Map delegate.

When Map is used, the matched path segments are removed from HttpRequest.Path and appended to HttpRequest.PathBase for each request.

Map supports nesting, for example:

app.Map("/level1", level1App => {
    level1App.Map("/level2a", level2AApp => {
        // "/level1/level2a" processing
    });
    level1App.Map("/level2b", level2BApp => {
        // "/level1/level2b" processing
    });
});

Map can also match multiple segments at once:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.Map("/map1/seg1", HandleMultiSeg);

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from non-Map delegate.");
});

app.Run();

static void HandleMultiSeg(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    app.Run(async context =>
    {
        await context.Response.WriteAsync("Map Test 1");
    });
}

MapWhen branches the request pipeline based on the result of the given predicate. Any predicate of type Func<HttpContext, bool> can be used to map requests to a new branch of the pipeline. In the following example, a predicate is used to detect the presence of a query string variable branch:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.MapWhen(context => context.Request.Query.ContainsKey("branch"), HandleBranch);

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from non-Map delegate.");
});

app.Run();

static void HandleBranch(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    app.Run(async context =>
    {
        var branchVer = context.Request.Query["branch"];
        await context.Response.WriteAsync($"Branch used = {branchVer}");
    });
}

The following table shows the requests and responses from http://localhost:1234 using the previous code:

Request Response
localhost:1234 Hello from non-Map delegate.
localhost:1234/?branch=main Branch used = main

UseWhen also branches the request pipeline based on the result of the given predicate. Unlike with MapWhen, this branch is rejoined to the main pipeline if it doesn't short-circuit or contain a terminal middleware:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.UseWhen(context => context.Request.Query.ContainsKey("branch"),
    appBuilder => HandleBranchAndRejoin(appBuilder));

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from non-Map delegate.");
});

app.Run();

void HandleBranchAndRejoin(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    var logger = app.ApplicationServices.GetRequiredService<ILogger<Program>>(); 

    app.Use(async (context, next) =>
    {
        var branchVer = context.Request.Query["branch"];
        logger.LogInformation("Branch used = {branchVer}", branchVer);

        // Do work that doesn't write to the Response.
        await next();
        // Do other work that doesn't write to the Response.
    });
}

In the preceding example, a response of Hello from non-Map delegate. is written for all requests. If the request includes a query string variable branch, its value is logged before the main pipeline is rejoined.

Built-in middleware

ASP.NET Core ships with the following middleware components. The Order column provides notes on middleware placement in the request processing pipeline and under what conditions the middleware may terminate request processing. When a middleware short-circuits the request processing pipeline and prevents further downstream middleware from processing a request, it's called a terminal middleware. For more information on short-circuiting, see the Create a middleware pipeline with WebApplication section.

Middleware Description Order
Authentication Provides authentication support. Before HttpContext.User is needed. Terminal for OAuth callbacks.
Authorization Provides authorization support. Immediately after the Authentication Middleware.
Cookie Policy Tracks consent from users for storing personal information and enforces minimum standards for cookie fields, such as secure and SameSite. Before middleware that issues cookies. Examples: Authentication, Session, MVC (TempData).
CORS Configures Cross-Origin Resource Sharing. Before components that use CORS. UseCors currently must go before UseResponseCaching due to this bug.
DeveloperExceptionPage Generates a page with error information that is intended for use only in the Development environment. Before components that generate errors. The project templates automatically register this middleware as the first middleware in the pipeline when the environment is Development.
Diagnostics Several separate middlewares that provide a developer exception page, exception handling, status code pages, and the default web page for new apps. Before components that generate errors. Terminal for exceptions or serving the default web page for new apps.
Forwarded Headers Forwards proxied headers onto the current request. Before components that consume the updated fields. Examples: scheme, host, client IP, method.
Health Check Checks the health of an ASP.NET Core app and its dependencies, such as checking database availability. Terminal if a request matches a health check endpoint.
Header Propagation Propagates HTTP headers from the incoming request to the outgoing HTTP Client requests.
HTTP Logging Logs HTTP Requests and Responses. At the beginning of the middleware pipeline.
HTTP Method Override Allows an incoming POST request to override the method. Before components that consume the updated method.
HTTPS Redirection Redirect all HTTP requests to HTTPS. Before components that consume the URL.
HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) Security enhancement middleware that adds a special response header. Before responses are sent and after components that modify requests. Examples: Forwarded Headers, URL Rewriting.
MVC Processes requests with MVC/Razor Pages. Terminal if a request matches a route.
OWIN Interop with OWIN-based apps, servers, and middleware. Terminal if the OWIN Middleware fully processes the request.
Output Caching Provides support for caching responses based on configuration. Before components that require caching. UseRouting must come before UseOutputCaching. UseCORS must come before UseOutputCaching.
Response Caching Provides support for caching responses. This requires client participation to work. Use output caching for complete server control. Before components that require caching. UseCORS must come before UseResponseCaching. Is typically not beneficial for UI apps such as Razor Pages because browsers generally set request headers that prevent caching. Output caching benefits UI apps.
Request Decompression Provides support for decompressing requests. Before components that read the request body.
Response Compression Provides support for compressing responses. Before components that require compression.
Request Localization Provides localization support. Before localization sensitive components. Must appear after Routing Middleware when using RouteDataRequestCultureProvider.
Endpoint Routing Defines and constrains request routes. Terminal for matching routes.
SPA Handles all requests from this point in the middleware chain by returning the default page for the Single Page Application (SPA) Late in the chain, so that other middleware for serving static files, MVC actions, etc., takes precedence.
Session Provides support for managing user sessions. Before components that require Session.
Static Files Provides support for serving static files and directory browsing. Terminal if a request matches a file.
URL Rewrite Provides support for rewriting URLs and redirecting requests. Before components that consume the URL.
W3CLogging Generates server access logs in the W3C Extended Log File Format. At the beginning of the middleware pipeline.
WebSockets Enables the WebSockets protocol. Before components that are required to accept WebSocket requests.

Additional resources

By Rick Anderson and Steve Smith

Middleware is software that's assembled into an app pipeline to handle requests and responses. Each component:

  • Chooses whether to pass the request to the next component in the pipeline.
  • Can perform work before and after the next component in the pipeline.

Request delegates are used to build the request pipeline. The request delegates handle each HTTP request.

Request delegates are configured using Run, Map, and Use extension methods. An individual request delegate can be specified in-line as an anonymous method (called in-line middleware), or it can be defined in a reusable class. These reusable classes and in-line anonymous methods are middleware, also called middleware components. Each middleware component in the request pipeline is responsible for invoking the next component in the pipeline or short-circuiting the pipeline. When a middleware short-circuits, it's called a terminal middleware because it prevents further middleware from processing the request.

Migrate HTTP handlers and modules to ASP.NET Core middleware explains the difference between request pipelines in ASP.NET Core and ASP.NET 4.x and provides additional middleware samples.

Middleware code analysis

ASP.NET Core includes many compiler platform analyzers that inspect application code for quality. For more information, see Code analysis in ASP.NET Core apps

Create a middleware pipeline with WebApplication

The ASP.NET Core request pipeline consists of a sequence of request delegates, called one after the other. The following diagram demonstrates the concept. The thread of execution follows the black arrows.

Request processing pattern showing a request arriving, processing through three middlewares, and the response leaving the app. Each middleware runs its logic and hands off the request to the next middleware at the next() statement. After the third middleware processes the request, the request passes back through the prior two middlewares in reverse order for additional processing after their next() statements before leaving the app as a response to the client.

Each delegate can perform operations before and after the next delegate. Exception-handling delegates should be called early in the pipeline, so they can catch exceptions that occur in later stages of the pipeline.

The simplest possible ASP.NET Core app sets up a single request delegate that handles all requests. This case doesn't include an actual request pipeline. Instead, a single anonymous function is called in response to every HTTP request.

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello world!");
});

app.Run();

Chain multiple request delegates together with Use. The next parameter represents the next delegate in the pipeline. You can short-circuit the pipeline by not calling the next parameter. You can typically perform actions both before and after the next delegate, as the following example demonstrates:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.Use(async (context, next) =>
{
    // Do work that can write to the Response.
    await next.Invoke();
    // Do logging or other work that doesn't write to the Response.
});

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from 2nd delegate.");
});

app.Run();

When a delegate doesn't pass a request to the next delegate, it's called short-circuiting the request pipeline. Short-circuiting is often desirable because it avoids unnecessary work. For example, Static File Middleware can act as a terminal middleware by processing a request for a static file and short-circuiting the rest of the pipeline. Middleware added to the pipeline before the middleware that terminates further processing still processes code after their next.Invoke statements. However, see the following warning about attempting to write to a response that has already been sent.

Warning

Don't call next.Invoke after the response has been sent to the client. Changes to HttpResponse after the response has started throw an exception. For example, setting headers and a status code throw an exception. Writing to the response body after calling next:

  • May cause a protocol violation. For example, writing more than the stated Content-Length.
  • May corrupt the body format. For example, writing an HTML footer to a CSS file.

HasStarted is a useful hint to indicate if headers have been sent or the body has been written to.

Run delegates don't receive a next parameter. The first Run delegate is always terminal and terminates the pipeline. Run is a convention. Some middleware components may expose Run[Middleware] methods that run at the end of the pipeline:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.Use(async (context, next) =>
{
    // Do work that can write to the Response.
    await next.Invoke();
    // Do logging or other work that doesn't write to the Response.
});

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from 2nd delegate.");
});

app.Run();

If you would like to see code comments translated to languages other than English, let us know in this GitHub discussion issue.

In the preceding example, the Run delegate writes "Hello from 2nd delegate." to the response and then terminates the pipeline. If another Use or Run delegate is added after the Run delegate, it's not called.

Prefer app.Use overload that requires passing the context to next

The non-allocating app.Use extension method:

  • Requires passing the context to next.
  • Saves two internal per-request allocations that are required when using the other overload.

For more information, see this GitHub issue.

Middleware order

The following diagram shows the complete request processing pipeline for ASP.NET Core MVC and Razor Pages apps. You can see how, in a typical app, existing middlewares are ordered and where custom middlewares are added. You have full control over how to reorder existing middlewares or inject new custom middlewares as necessary for your scenarios.

ASP.NET Core middleware pipeline

The Endpoint middleware in the preceding diagram executes the filter pipeline for the corresponding app type—MVC or Razor Pages.

The Routing middleware in the preceding diagram is shown following Static Files. This is the order that the project templates implement by explicitly calling app.UseRouting. If you don't call app.UseRouting, the Routing middleware runs at the beginning of the pipeline by default. For more information, see Routing.

ASP.NET Core filter pipeline

The order that middleware components are added in the Program.cs file defines the order in which the middleware components are invoked on requests and the reverse order for the response. The order is critical for security, performance, and functionality.

The following highlighted code in Program.cs adds security-related middleware components in the typical recommended order:

using IndividualAccountsExample.Data;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Identity;
using Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore;

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);

// Add services to the container.
var connectionString = builder.Configuration.GetConnectionString("DefaultConnection");
builder.Services.AddDbContext<ApplicationDbContext>(options =>
    options.UseSqlServer(connectionString));
builder.Services.AddDatabaseDeveloperPageExceptionFilter();

builder.Services.AddDefaultIdentity<IdentityUser>(options => options.SignIn.RequireConfirmedAccount = true)
    .AddEntityFrameworkStores<ApplicationDbContext>();
builder.Services.AddRazorPages();

var app = builder.Build();

// Configure the HTTP request pipeline.
if (app.Environment.IsDevelopment())
{
    app.UseMigrationsEndPoint();
}
else
{
    app.UseExceptionHandler("/Error");
    // The default HSTS value is 30 days. You may want to change this for production scenarios, see https://aka.ms/aspnetcore-hsts.
    app.UseHsts();
}

app.UseHttpsRedirection();
app.UseStaticFiles();
// app.UseCookiePolicy();

app.UseRouting();
// app.UseRequestLocalization();
// app.UseCors();

app.UseAuthentication();
app.UseAuthorization();
// app.UseSession();
// app.UseResponseCompression();
// app.UseResponseCaching();

app.MapRazorPages();
app.MapControllerRoute(
    name: "default",
    pattern: "{controller=Home}/{action=Index}/{id?}");

app.Run();

In the preceding code:

  • Middleware that is not added when creating a new web app with individual users accounts is commented out.
  • Not every middleware appears in this exact order, but many do. For example:
    • UseCors, UseAuthentication, and UseAuthorization must appear in the order shown.
    • UseCors currently must appear before UseResponseCaching. This requirement is explained in GitHub issue dotnet/aspnetcore #23218.
    • UseRequestLocalization must appear before any middleware that might check the request culture (for example, app.UseMvcWithDefaultRoute()).

In some scenarios, middleware has different ordering. For example, caching and compression ordering is scenario specific, and there are multiple valid orderings. For example:

app.UseResponseCaching();
app.UseResponseCompression();

With the preceding code, CPU usage could be reduced by caching the compressed response, but you might end up caching multiple representations of a resource using different compression algorithms such as Gzip or Brotli.

The following ordering combines static files to allow caching compressed static files:

app.UseResponseCaching();
app.UseResponseCompression();
app.UseStaticFiles();

The following Program.cs code adds middleware components for common app scenarios:

  1. Exception/error handling
    • When the app runs in the Development environment:
    • When the app runs in the Production environment:
      • Exception Handler Middleware (UseExceptionHandler) catches exceptions thrown in the following middlewares.
      • HTTP Strict Transport Security Protocol (HSTS) Middleware (UseHsts) adds the Strict-Transport-Security header.
  2. HTTPS Redirection Middleware (UseHttpsRedirection) redirects HTTP requests to HTTPS.
  3. Static File Middleware (UseStaticFiles) returns static files and short-circuits further request processing.
  4. Cookie Policy Middleware (UseCookiePolicy) conforms the app to the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) regulations.
  5. Routing Middleware (UseRouting) to route requests.
  6. Authentication Middleware (UseAuthentication) attempts to authenticate the user before they're allowed access to secure resources.
  7. Authorization Middleware (UseAuthorization) authorizes a user to access secure resources.
  8. Session Middleware (UseSession) establishes and maintains session state. If the app uses session state, call Session Middleware after Cookie Policy Middleware and before MVC Middleware.
  9. Endpoint Routing Middleware (UseEndpoints with MapRazorPages) to add Razor Pages endpoints to the request pipeline.
if (env.IsDevelopment())
{
    app.UseDeveloperExceptionPage();
    app.UseDatabaseErrorPage();
}
else
{
    app.UseExceptionHandler("/Error");
    app.UseHsts();
}
app.UseHttpsRedirection();
app.UseStaticFiles();
app.UseCookiePolicy();
app.UseRouting();
app.UseAuthentication();
app.UseAuthorization();
app.UseSession();
app.MapRazorPages();

In the preceding example code, each middleware extension method is exposed on WebApplicationBuilder through the Microsoft.AspNetCore.Builder namespace.

UseExceptionHandler is the first middleware component added to the pipeline. Therefore, the Exception Handler Middleware catches any exceptions that occur in later calls.

Static File Middleware is called early in the pipeline so that it can handle requests and short-circuit without going through the remaining components. The Static File Middleware provides no authorization checks. Any files served by Static File Middleware, including those under wwwroot, are publicly available. For an approach to secure static files, see Static files in ASP.NET Core.

If the request isn't handled by the Static File Middleware, it's passed on to the Authentication Middleware (UseAuthentication), which performs authentication. Authentication doesn't short-circuit unauthenticated requests. Although Authentication Middleware authenticates requests, authorization (and rejection) occurs only after MVC selects a specific Razor Page or MVC controller and action.

The following example demonstrates a middleware order where requests for static files are handled by Static File Middleware before Response Compression Middleware. Static files aren't compressed with this middleware order. The Razor Pages responses can be compressed.

// Static files aren't compressed by Static File Middleware.
app.UseStaticFiles();

app.UseRouting();

app.UseResponseCompression();

app.MapRazorPages();

For information about Single Page Applications, see the guides for the React and Angular project templates.

UseCors and UseStaticFiles order

The order for calling UseCors and UseStaticFiles depends on the app. For more information, see UseCors and UseStaticFiles order

Forwarded Headers Middleware order

Forwarded Headers Middleware should run before other middleware. This ordering ensures that the middleware relying on forwarded headers information can consume the header values for processing. To run Forwarded Headers Middleware after diagnostics and error handling middleware, see Forwarded Headers Middleware order.

Branch the middleware pipeline

Map extensions are used as a convention for branching the pipeline. Map branches the request pipeline based on matches of the given request path. If the request path starts with the given path, the branch is executed.

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.Map("/map1", HandleMapTest1);

app.Map("/map2", HandleMapTest2);

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from non-Map delegate.");
});

app.Run();

static void HandleMapTest1(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    app.Run(async context =>
    {
        await context.Response.WriteAsync("Map Test 1");
    });
}

static void HandleMapTest2(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    app.Run(async context =>
    {
        await context.Response.WriteAsync("Map Test 2");
    });
}

The following table shows the requests and responses from http://localhost:1234 using the preceding code.

Request Response
localhost:1234 Hello from non-Map delegate.
localhost:1234/map1 Map Test 1
localhost:1234/map2 Map Test 2
localhost:1234/map3 Hello from non-Map delegate.

When Map is used, the matched path segments are removed from HttpRequest.Path and appended to HttpRequest.PathBase for each request.

Map supports nesting, for example:

app.Map("/level1", level1App => {
    level1App.Map("/level2a", level2AApp => {
        // "/level1/level2a" processing
    });
    level1App.Map("/level2b", level2BApp => {
        // "/level1/level2b" processing
    });
});

Map can also match multiple segments at once:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.Map("/map1/seg1", HandleMultiSeg);

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from non-Map delegate.");
});

app.Run();

static void HandleMultiSeg(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    app.Run(async context =>
    {
        await context.Response.WriteAsync("Map Test 1");
    });
}

MapWhen branches the request pipeline based on the result of the given predicate. Any predicate of type Func<HttpContext, bool> can be used to map requests to a new branch of the pipeline. In the following example, a predicate is used to detect the presence of a query string variable branch:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.MapWhen(context => context.Request.Query.ContainsKey("branch"), HandleBranch);

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from non-Map delegate.");
});

app.Run();

static void HandleBranch(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    app.Run(async context =>
    {
        var branchVer = context.Request.Query["branch"];
        await context.Response.WriteAsync($"Branch used = {branchVer}");
    });
}

The following table shows the requests and responses from http://localhost:1234 using the previous code:

Request Response
localhost:1234 Hello from non-Map delegate.
localhost:1234/?branch=main Branch used = main

UseWhen also branches the request pipeline based on the result of the given predicate. Unlike with MapWhen, this branch is rejoined to the main pipeline if it doesn't short-circuit or contain a terminal middleware:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();

app.UseWhen(context => context.Request.Query.ContainsKey("branch"),
    appBuilder => HandleBranchAndRejoin(appBuilder));

app.Run(async context =>
{
    await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from non-Map delegate.");
});

app.Run();

void HandleBranchAndRejoin(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    var logger = app.ApplicationServices.GetRequiredService<ILogger<Program>>(); 

    app.Use(async (context, next) =>
    {
        var branchVer = context.Request.Query["branch"];
        logger.LogInformation("Branch used = {branchVer}", branchVer);

        // Do work that doesn't write to the Response.
        await next();
        // Do other work that doesn't write to the Response.
    });
}

In the preceding example, a response of Hello from non-Map delegate. is written for all requests. If the request includes a query string variable branch, its value is logged before the main pipeline is rejoined.

Built-in middleware

ASP.NET Core ships with the following middleware components. The Order column provides notes on middleware placement in the request processing pipeline and under what conditions the middleware may terminate request processing. When a middleware short-circuits the request processing pipeline and prevents further downstream middleware from processing a request, it's called a terminal middleware. For more information on short-circuiting, see the Create a middleware pipeline with WebApplication section.

Middleware Description Order
Authentication Provides authentication support. Before HttpContext.User is needed. Terminal for OAuth callbacks.
Authorization Provides authorization support. Immediately after the Authentication Middleware.
Cookie Policy Tracks consent from users for storing personal information and enforces minimum standards for cookie fields, such as secure and SameSite. Before middleware that issues cookies. Examples: Authentication, Session, MVC (TempData).
CORS Configures Cross-Origin Resource Sharing. Before components that use CORS. UseCors currently must go before UseResponseCaching due to this bug.
DeveloperExceptionPage Generates a page with error information that is intended for use only in the Development environment. Before components that generate errors. The project templates automatically register this middleware as the first middleware in the pipeline when the environment is Development.
Diagnostics Several separate middlewares that provide a developer exception page, exception handling, status code pages, and the default web page for new apps. Before components that generate errors. Terminal for exceptions or serving the default web page for new apps.
Forwarded Headers Forwards proxied headers onto the current request. Before components that consume the updated fields. Examples: scheme, host, client IP, method.
Health Check Checks the health of an ASP.NET Core app and its dependencies, such as checking database availability. Terminal if a request matches a health check endpoint.
Header Propagation Propagates HTTP headers from the incoming request to the outgoing HTTP Client requests.
HTTP Logging Logs HTTP Requests and Responses. At the beginning of the middleware pipeline.
HTTP Method Override Allows an incoming POST request to override the method. Before components that consume the updated method.
HTTPS Redirection Redirect all HTTP requests to HTTPS. Before components that consume the URL.
HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) Security enhancement middleware that adds a special response header. Before responses are sent and after components that modify requests. Examples: Forwarded Headers, URL Rewriting.
MVC Processes requests with MVC/Razor Pages. Terminal if a request matches a route.
OWIN Interop with OWIN-based apps, servers, and middleware. Terminal if the OWIN Middleware fully processes the request.
Request Decompression Provides support for decompressing requests. Before components that read the request body.
Response Caching Provides support for caching responses. Before components that require caching. UseCORS must come before UseResponseCaching.
Response Compression Provides support for compressing responses. Before components that require compression.
Request Localization Provides localization support. Before localization sensitive components. Must appear after Routing Middleware when using RouteDataRequestCultureProvider.
Endpoint Routing Defines and constrains request routes. Terminal for matching routes.
SPA Handles all requests from this point in the middleware chain by returning the default page for the Single Page Application (SPA) Late in the chain, so that other middleware for serving static files, MVC actions, etc., takes precedence.
Session Provides support for managing user sessions. Before components that require Session.
Static Files Provides support for serving static files and directory browsing. Terminal if a request matches a file.
URL Rewrite Provides support for rewriting URLs and redirecting requests. Before components that consume the URL.
W3CLogging Generates server access logs in the W3C Extended Log File Format. At the beginning of the middleware pipeline.
WebSockets Enables the WebSockets protocol. Before components that are required to accept WebSocket requests.

Additional resources

By Rick Anderson and Steve Smith

Middleware is software that's assembled into an app pipeline to handle requests and responses. Each component:

  • Chooses whether to pass the request to the next component in the pipeline.
  • Can perform work before and after the next component in the pipeline.

Request delegates are used to build the request pipeline. The request delegates handle each HTTP request.

Request delegates are configured using Run, Map, and Use extension methods. An individual request delegate can be specified in-line as an anonymous method (called in-line middleware), or it can be defined in a reusable class. These reusable classes and in-line anonymous methods are middleware, also called middleware components. Each middleware component in the request pipeline is responsible for invoking the next component in the pipeline or short-circuiting the pipeline. When a middleware short-circuits, it's called a terminal middleware because it prevents further middleware from processing the request.

Migrate HTTP handlers and modules to ASP.NET Core middleware explains the difference between request pipelines in ASP.NET Core and ASP.NET 4.x and provides additional middleware samples.

Create a middleware pipeline with IApplicationBuilder

The ASP.NET Core request pipeline consists of a sequence of request delegates, called one after the other. The following diagram demonstrates the concept. The thread of execution follows the black arrows.

Request processing pattern showing a request arriving, processing through three middlewares, and the response leaving the app. Each middleware runs its logic and hands off the request to the next middleware at the next() statement. After the third middleware processes the request, the request passes back through the prior two middlewares in reverse order for additional processing after their next() statements before leaving the app as a response to the client.

Each delegate can perform operations before and after the next delegate. Exception-handling delegates should be called early in the pipeline, so they can catch exceptions that occur in later stages of the pipeline.

The simplest possible ASP.NET Core app sets up a single request delegate that handles all requests. This case doesn't include an actual request pipeline. Instead, a single anonymous function is called in response to every HTTP request.

public class Startup
{
    public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app)
    {
        app.Run(async context =>
        {
            await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello, World!");
        });
    }
}

Chain multiple request delegates together with Use. The next parameter represents the next delegate in the pipeline. You can short-circuit the pipeline by not calling the next parameter. You can typically perform actions both before and after the next delegate, as the following example demonstrates:

public class Startup
{
    public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app)
    {
        app.Use(async (context, next) =>
        {
            // Do work that doesn't write to the Response.
            await next.Invoke();
            // Do logging or other work that doesn't write to the Response.
        });

        app.Run(async context =>
        {
            await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from 2nd delegate.");
        });
    }
}

When a delegate doesn't pass a request to the next delegate, it's called short-circuiting the request pipeline. Short-circuiting is often desirable because it avoids unnecessary work. For example, Static File Middleware can act as a terminal middleware by processing a request for a static file and short-circuiting the rest of the pipeline. Middleware added to the pipeline before the middleware that terminates further processing still processes code after their next.Invoke statements. However, see the following warning about attempting to write to a response that has already been sent.

Warning

Don't call next.Invoke after the response has been sent to the client. Changes to HttpResponse after the response has started throw an exception. For example, setting headers and a status code throw an exception. Writing to the response body after calling next:

  • May cause a protocol violation. For example, writing more than the stated Content-Length.
  • May corrupt the body format. For example, writing an HTML footer to a CSS file.

HasStarted is a useful hint to indicate if headers have been sent or the body has been written to.

Run delegates don't receive a next parameter. The first Run delegate is always terminal and terminates the pipeline. Run is a convention. Some middleware components may expose Run[Middleware] methods that run at the end of the pipeline:

public class Startup
{
    public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app)
    {
        app.Use(async (context, next) =>
        {
            // Do work that doesn't write to the Response.
            await next.Invoke();
            // Do logging or other work that doesn't write to the Response.
        });

        app.Run(async context =>
        {
            await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from 2nd delegate.");
        });
    }
}

If you would like to see code comments translated to languages other than English, let us know in this GitHub discussion issue.

In the preceding example, the Run delegate writes "Hello from 2nd delegate." to the response and then terminates the pipeline. If another Use or Run delegate is added after the Run delegate, it's not called.

Middleware order

The following diagram shows the complete request processing pipeline for ASP.NET Core MVC and Razor Pages apps. You can see how, in a typical app, existing middlewares are ordered and where custom middlewares are added. You have full control over how to reorder existing middlewares or inject new custom middlewares as necessary for your scenarios.

ASP.NET Core middleware pipeline

The Endpoint middleware in the preceding diagram executes the filter pipeline for the corresponding app type—MVC or Razor Pages.

ASP.NET Core filter pipeline

The order that middleware components are added in the Startup.Configure method defines the order in which the middleware components are invoked on requests and the reverse order for the response. The order is critical for security, performance, and functionality.

The following Startup.Configure method adds security-related middleware components in the typical recommended order:

public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, IWebHostEnvironment env)
{
    if (env.IsDevelopment())
    {
        app.UseDeveloperExceptionPage();
        app.UseDatabaseErrorPage();
    }
    else
    {
        app.UseExceptionHandler("/Error");
        app.UseHsts();
    }

    app.UseHttpsRedirection();
    app.UseStaticFiles();
    // app.UseCookiePolicy();

    app.UseRouting();
    // app.UseRequestLocalization();
    // app.UseCors();

    app.UseAuthentication();
    app.UseAuthorization();
    // app.UseSession();
    // app.UseResponseCompression();
    // app.UseResponseCaching();

    app.UseEndpoints(endpoints =>
    {
        endpoints.MapRazorPages();
        endpoints.MapControllerRoute(
            name: "default",
            pattern: "{controller=Home}/{action=Index}/{id?}");
    });
}

In the preceding code:

  • Middleware that is not added when creating a new web app with individual users accounts is commented out.
  • Not every middleware appears in this exact order, but many do. For example:
    • UseCors, UseAuthentication, and UseAuthorization must appear in the order shown.
    • UseCors currently must appear before UseResponseCaching due to this bug.
    • UseRequestLocalization must appear before any middleware that might check the request culture (for example, app.UseMvcWithDefaultRoute()).

In some scenarios, middleware has different ordering. For example, caching and compression ordering is scenario specific, and there's multiple valid orderings. For example:

app.UseResponseCaching();
app.UseResponseCompression();

With the preceding code, CPU could be saved by caching the compressed response, but you might end up caching multiple representations of a resource using different compression algorithms such as Gzip or Brotli.

The following ordering combines static files to allow caching compressed static files:

app.UseResponseCaching();
app.UseResponseCompression();
app.UseStaticFiles();

The following Startup.Configure method adds middleware components for common app scenarios:

  1. Exception/error handling
    • When the app runs in the Development environment:
      • Developer Exception Page Middleware (UseDeveloperExceptionPage) reports app runtime errors.
      • Database Error Page Middleware reports database runtime errors.
    • When the app runs in the Production environment:
      • Exception Handler Middleware (UseExceptionHandler) catches exceptions thrown in the following middlewares.
      • HTTP Strict Transport Security Protocol (HSTS) Middleware (UseHsts) adds the Strict-Transport-Security header.
  2. HTTPS Redirection Middleware (UseHttpsRedirection) redirects HTTP requests to HTTPS.
  3. Static File Middleware (UseStaticFiles) returns static files and short-circuits further request processing.
  4. Cookie Policy Middleware (UseCookiePolicy) conforms the app to the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) regulations.
  5. Routing Middleware (UseRouting) to route requests.
  6. Authentication Middleware (UseAuthentication) attempts to authenticate the user before they're allowed access to secure resources.
  7. Authorization Middleware (UseAuthorization) authorizes a user to access secure resources.
  8. Session Middleware (UseSession) establishes and maintains session state. If the app uses session state, call Session Middleware after Cookie Policy Middleware and before MVC Middleware.
  9. Endpoint Routing Middleware (UseEndpoints with MapRazorPages) to add Razor Pages endpoints to the request pipeline.
public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, IWebHostEnvironment env)
{
    if (env.IsDevelopment())
    {
        app.UseDeveloperExceptionPage();
        app.UseDatabaseErrorPage();
    }
    else
    {
        app.UseExceptionHandler("/Error");
        app.UseHsts();
    }

    app.UseHttpsRedirection();
    app.UseStaticFiles();
    app.UseCookiePolicy();
    app.UseRouting();
    app.UseAuthentication();
    app.UseAuthorization();
    app.UseSession();

    app.UseEndpoints(endpoints =>
    {
        endpoints.MapRazorPages();
    });
}

In the preceding example code, each middleware extension method is exposed on IApplicationBuilder through the Microsoft.AspNetCore.Builder namespace.

UseExceptionHandler is the first middleware component added to the pipeline. Therefore, the Exception Handler Middleware catches any exceptions that occur in later calls.

Static File Middleware is called early in the pipeline so that it can handle requests and short-circuit without going through the remaining components. The Static File Middleware provides no authorization checks. Any files served by Static File Middleware, including those under wwwroot, are publicly available. For an approach to secure static files, see Static files in ASP.NET Core.

If the request isn't handled by the Static File Middleware, it's passed on to the Authentication Middleware (UseAuthentication), which performs authentication. Authentication doesn't short-circuit unauthenticated requests. Although Authentication Middleware authenticates requests, authorization (and rejection) occurs only after MVC selects a specific Razor Page or MVC controller and action.

The following example demonstrates a middleware order where requests for static files are handled by Static File Middleware before Response Compression Middleware. Static files aren't compressed with this middleware order. The Razor Pages responses can be compressed.

public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app)
{
    // Static files aren't compressed by Static File Middleware.
    app.UseStaticFiles();

    app.UseRouting();

    app.UseResponseCompression();

    app.UseEndpoints(endpoints =>
    {
        endpoints.MapRazorPages();
    });
}

For Single Page Applications (SPAs), the SPA middleware UseSpaStaticFiles usually comes last in the middleware pipeline. The SPA middleware comes last:

  • To allow all other middlewares to respond to matching requests first.
  • To allow SPAs with client-side routing to run for all routes that are unrecognized by the server app.

For more details on SPAs, see the guides for the React and Angular project templates.

Forwarded Headers Middleware order

Forwarded Headers Middleware should run before other middleware. This ordering ensures that the middleware relying on forwarded headers information can consume the header values for processing. To run Forwarded Headers Middleware after diagnostics and error handling middleware, see Forwarded Headers Middleware order.

Branch the middleware pipeline

Map extensions are used as a convention for branching the pipeline. Map branches the request pipeline based on matches of the given request path. If the request path starts with the given path, the branch is executed.

public class Startup
{
    private static void HandleMapTest1(IApplicationBuilder app)
    {
        app.Run(async context =>
        {
            await context.Response.WriteAsync("Map Test 1");
        });
    }

    private static void HandleMapTest2(IApplicationBuilder app)
    {
        app.Run(async context =>
        {
            await context.Response.WriteAsync("Map Test 2");
        });
    }

    public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app)
    {
        app.Map("/map1", HandleMapTest1);

        app.Map("/map2", HandleMapTest2);

        app.Run(async context =>
        {
            await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from non-Map delegate.");
        });
    }
}

The following table shows the requests and responses from http://localhost:1234 using the previous code.

Request Response
localhost:1234 Hello from non-Map delegate.
localhost:1234/map1 Map Test 1
localhost:1234/map2 Map Test 2
localhost:1234/map3 Hello from non-Map delegate.

When Map is used, the matched path segments are removed from HttpRequest.Path and appended to HttpRequest.PathBase for each request.

Map supports nesting, for example:

app.Map("/level1", level1App => {
    level1App.Map("/level2a", level2AApp => {
        // "/level1/level2a" processing
    });
    level1App.Map("/level2b", level2BApp => {
        // "/level1/level2b" processing
    });
});

Map can also match multiple segments at once:

public class Startup
{
    private static void HandleMultiSeg(IApplicationBuilder app)
    {
        app.Run(async context =>
        {
            await context.Response.WriteAsync("Map multiple segments.");
        });
    }

    public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app)
    {
        app.Map("/map1/seg1", HandleMultiSeg);

        app.Run(async context =>
        {
            await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from non-Map delegate.");
        });
    }
}

MapWhen branches the request pipeline based on the result of the given predicate. Any predicate of type Func<HttpContext, bool> can be used to map requests to a new branch of the pipeline. In the following example, a predicate is used to detect the presence of a query string variable branch:

public class Startup
{
    private static void HandleBranch(IApplicationBuilder app)
    {
        app.Run(async context =>
        {
            var branchVer = context.Request.Query["branch"];
            await context.Response.WriteAsync($"Branch used = {branchVer}");
        });
    }

    public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app)
    {
        app.MapWhen(context => context.Request.Query.ContainsKey("branch"),
                               HandleBranch);

        app.Run(async context =>
        {
            await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from non-Map delegate.");
        });
    }
}

The following table shows the requests and responses from http://localhost:1234 using the previous code:

Request Response
localhost:1234 Hello from non-Map delegate.
localhost:1234/?branch=main Branch used = main

UseWhen also branches the request pipeline based on the result of the given predicate. Unlike with MapWhen, this branch is rejoined to the main pipeline if it doesn't short-circuit or contain a terminal middleware:

public class Startup
{
    private void HandleBranchAndRejoin(IApplicationBuilder app, ILogger<Startup> logger)
    {
        app.Use(async (context, next) =>
        {
            var branchVer = context.Request.Query["branch"];
            logger.LogInformation("Branch used = {branchVer}", branchVer);

            // Do work that doesn't write to the Response.
            await next();
            // Do other work that doesn't write to the Response.
        });
    }

    public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, ILogger<Startup> logger)
    {
        app.UseWhen(context => context.Request.Query.ContainsKey("branch"),
                               appBuilder => HandleBranchAndRejoin(appBuilder, logger));

        app.Run(async context =>
        {
            await context.Response.WriteAsync("Hello from main pipeline.");
        });
    }
}

In the preceding example, a response of "Hello from main pipeline." is written for all requests. If the request includes a query string variable branch, its value is logged before the main pipeline is rejoined.

Built-in middleware

ASP.NET Core ships with the following middleware components. The Order column provides notes on middleware placement in the request processing pipeline and under what conditions the middleware may terminate request processing. When a middleware short-circuits the request processing pipeline and prevents further downstream middleware from processing a request, it's called a terminal middleware. For more information on short-circuiting, see the Create a middleware pipeline with IApplicationBuilder section.

Middleware Description Order
Authentication Provides authentication support. Before HttpContext.User is needed. Terminal for OAuth callbacks.
Authorization Provides authorization support. Immediately after the Authentication Middleware.
Cookie Policy Tracks consent from users for storing personal information and enforces minimum standards for cookie fields, such as secure and SameSite. Before middleware that issues cookies. Examples: Authentication, Session, MVC (TempData).
CORS Configures Cross-Origin Resource Sharing. Before components that use CORS. UseCors currently must go before UseResponseCaching due to this bug.
Diagnostics Several separate middlewares that provide a developer exception page, exception handling, status code pages, and the default web page for new apps. Before components that generate errors. Terminal for exceptions or serving the default web page for new apps.
Forwarded Headers Forwards proxied headers onto the current request. Before components that consume the updated fields. Examples: scheme, host, client IP, method.
Health Check Checks the health of an ASP.NET Core app and its dependencies, such as checking database availability. Terminal if a request matches a health check endpoint.
Header Propagation Propagates HTTP headers from the incoming request to the outgoing HTTP Client requests.
HTTP Method Override Allows an incoming POST request to override the method. Before components that consume the updated method.
HTTPS Redirection Redirect all HTTP requests to HTTPS. Before components that consume the URL.
HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) Security enhancement middleware that adds a special response header. Before responses are sent and after components that modify requests. Examples: Forwarded Headers, URL Rewriting.
MVC Processes requests with MVC/Razor Pages. Terminal if a request matches a route.
OWIN Interop with OWIN-based apps, servers, and middleware. Terminal if the OWIN Middleware fully processes the request.
Response Caching Provides support for caching responses. Before components that require caching. UseCORS must come before UseResponseCaching.
Response Compression Provides support for compressing responses. Before components that require compression.
Request Localization Provides localization support. Before localization sensitive components. Must appear after Routing Middleware when using RouteDataRequestCultureProvider.
Endpoint Routing Defines and constrains request routes. Terminal for matching routes.
SPA Handles all requests from this point in the middleware chain by returning the default page for the Single Page Application (SPA) Late in the chain, so that other middleware for serving static files, MVC actions, etc., takes precedence.
Session Provides support for managing user sessions. Before components that require Session.
Static Files Provides support for serving static files and directory browsing. Terminal if a request matches a file.
URL Rewrite Provides support for rewriting URLs and redirecting requests. Before components that consume the URL.
WebSockets Enables the WebSocket protocol. Before components that are required to accept WebSocket requests.

Additional resources