@Botler Should optionally add the filter before the .ToList as to not get all assets form the database when you only want one
First build the query: var query = databaseContext.Assets.Include(asset => asset.Alerts); Then if(id) query = query.Where(id); Then await query.ToListAsync
[Squirrel in Training] Roel hasn't written in like 4 weeks and here I am pining him asking him sth and all of a suddon sama seinpai is back amongst the living 😄
Start from the root of where the site is hosted then
In your angular app you can make a folder /resources or something, deploy that into the folder with the rest of the app, then href resources/yourfile.png
Puzzle time! Given 4 numbers: 1, 3, 4 and 6. Each number can only be used once. Use as many as you want the following operators and parenthesis to obtain the largest possible number.
The operators: *, /, +, and - The parentheses: ( and )
Hey guys I have a quick question. Is sqlLite much different from using mssql?
I'm replicating a project from a book. The book uses mssql, but I can't seem to get it working. SQLite offers similar features while allowing me to commit the database into the repo. Are the two much different? Does is there a C# SQLite library with transactions (rollback if transaction not completed)?
Let A is a set of the first N natural numbers. B is a subset of A. Use as many operators or parentheses as you want to create the greatest number obtained from using at most once for each element of B.
Let A is a set of the first N natural numbers. B is a subset of A. Use as many operators or parentheses as you want to create the greatest number obtained from using at most once for each element of B.
Any recommendation on how to secure web APIs? I've heard of many things; token-authentication, JWT..etc any good reference or article is very appreciated
No idea lol. We're using JWTs, works quite well, but I heard we're doing it wrong. My personal project just uses a guid as login token, probably not very secure but it works.
I still have to make those guids expire at some point...
@mshwf One of the simplest ways depending on how much control you have on the HTTP client portion, could be to use a simple GUID in the request header providing a header name of x-api-key, then in your web API examine the request and either accept or decline. If using Asp.Net for the WebAPI a piece of middleware could be easily coded and then added to the pipeline. The WebAPI would need knowledge of the same GUID which could be stored in a configuration file or environment variable.
Sorry, I'm not familiar with the concept. If a not-authenticated user sent a request with x-api-key of a random GUID, how do I know he is not authenticated?
But this assumes the API is only reachable from a client you developed, but what if someone tried to access the API from ,for example, Postman, or browser?