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What is the best way to check if the WebAPI is available or not? I want to check it in a simple if() statement, is it even possible to keep it relatively simple? if there is a better way to check. like a try/catch. just tell me. Thanks

I want to include the if-statement in my code-behind Page_Load Method. So I can block the site when the API is not available.

I tried this:

try
  {
       WebClient client = new WebClient();
       client.UseDefaultCredentials = true;

       string response = client.DownloadString(baseuri + Constants.API_LEHRLING + lehrlingID);
   }
   catch (Exception ex)
   {
        string url = "AccessDenied.aspx";
        Server.Transfer(url, true);
   }

I am trying to Download a string from my webapi. my uri is built automatically. if a exception happens, i refer to my Error site.

Any other ideas? this method works, but its not very clean

16
  • I would suggest to expose a Get method from web-api and ping it from your C# code.
    – Sagar
    Sep 6, 2016 at 7:50
  • Can you provide some code? an example would help me very much
    – anon
    Sep 6, 2016 at 7:51
  • 1
    is your API unavailable a lot? If so, then maybe look at fixing it. If not, then instead of testing its availability every time you load the page (which will cost you the time and resources for an additional HTTP request), just make your application handle connection (and other) errors from the API gracefully instead. I'm not sure that continuously testing its existence is good design really. Just design for occasional failure. If there's a big availability problem, then look at how you can sort that out instead of working round it.
    – ADyson
    Sep 6, 2016 at 7:55
  • the problem is that my application contains sensitive data. if the webapi crashes which luckily doesnt happen a lot, the user can access my page. Allthough it can happen..... so i have to check to add a bit more security to my site. Do you know how i would be able to check? @ADyson
    – anon
    Sep 6, 2016 at 7:57
  • 1
    @AlessandroMinneci He doesn't 'want to use' a try/catch... he merely suggests it and in the same sentence asks if there's a better way to do it... and you ended up using a try/catch anyway lol.
    – BLoB
    Sep 6, 2016 at 10:45

2 Answers 2

5

Something like this should do it (assuming your API has a method which supports a fairly simple GET request). If you don't get a HTTP 200 (OK) response, there's likely a problem, and you should take steps to make your site un-usable (e.g. hide all the content).

It might be best to put this in your master page, if you have one:

protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    try
    {
      System.Net.WebClient client = new System.Net.WebClient();
      string result = client.DownloadString("http://www.example.com/api/TestMethod");
    }
    catch (System.Net.WebException ex)
    {
      //do something here to make the site unusable, e.g:
      myContent.Visible = false;
      myErrorDiv.Visible = true;

    }

}
4
  • System.Net - as I've shown in the code. It's in the WebClient class.
    – ADyson
    Sep 6, 2016 at 8:36
  • just realised it's not static, will edit the answer very slightly.
    – ADyson
    Sep 6, 2016 at 8:37
  • yes i know that its in System.net. however i have to add a object assembly. which one?
    – anon
    Sep 6, 2016 at 8:39
  • you can add an explicit reference to system.net into your project if you want, but I'm not sure it's necessary. I'm pretty sure I've used it without. Might be different in a forms project, I normally use MVC.
    – ADyson
    Sep 6, 2016 at 8:41
5

Assuming this is your flow:

  • User loads your page, you check whether the API is up.
  • User enters data, submits your form.
  • Using the submitted data, you call the actual API call you're interested in.

It makes no sense to want to check an API before issuing the actual request. Sure, the simple "GET" might succeed, and then the actual request might fail, having proven nothing. The API can go down between the two requests, or the "check" request does something different than the actual request, causing the latter to fail anyway.

Also, given most network I/O are very leaky abstractions, you need exception handling code around them anyway. So whether you use HttpWebRequest, WebClient or HttpClient, you will need to wrap the code in a try-catch block anyway.

See How to see if HttpClient connects to offline website, .Net HttpWebRequest.GetResponse() raises exception when http status code 400 (bad request) is returned, How to check if Web server is up? (C#) and so on.

However, it seems like the API handles authorization and authentication for you, and that the API sometimes "fails", causing your code to detect this as a valid attempt to use your site, so it seems you just need to fix the code that actually performs the API call. No if() statement is going to help you there.

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