ExtCore is free, open source and cross-platform framework for creating modular and extendable web applications based on ASP.NET Core. It is built using the best and the most modern tools and languages (Visual Studio 2017, C# etc). Join our team!
ExtCore allows you to build your web applications from the different independent reusable modules or extensions. Each of these modules or extensions may consist of one or more ASP.NET Core projects and each of these projects may include everything you want as any other ASP.NET Core project. You don’t need to perform any additional actions to make it all work: any ASP.NET Core project can be used as an ExtCore-based web application extension by default. Controllers, view components, views (added as resources and/or precompiled), static content (added as resources) are resolved automatically. These projects may be then added to the web application in two ways: as direct dependencies (as source code or NuGet packages) or by copying compiled DLLs to the Extensions folder. ExtCore supports both of these options out of the box and at the same time.
Furthermore, any project of the ExtCore-based web application is able to discover the types that are defined inside all the projects (optionally using the predicates for assemblies filtering) and to get the implementations or instances of that types.
Any module or extension can execute its own code during the web application initialization and startup. You can use priorities to specify the correct order of the calls. This feature might be used for configuration, to register services etc.
ExtCore consists of two general packages and four optional basic extensions.
ExtCore general packages are:
- ExtCore.Infrastructure;
- ExtCore.WebApplication.
This package describes such basic shared things as IExtension interface and its abstract implementation – ExtensionBase class. Also it contains ExtensionManager class – the central element in the ExtCore types discovering mechanism. Most of the modules or extensions need this package as dependency.
This package describes basic web application behavior with Startup abstract class. This behavior includes modules and extensions assemblies discovering, ExtensionManager initialization etc. Any ExtCore web application must inherit its Startup class from ExtCore.WebApplication.Startup class in order to work properly. Also this package contains IAssemblyProvider interface and its implementation – AssemblyProvider class which is used to discover assemblies and might be replaced with the custom one.
ExtCore basic extensions are:
- ExtCore.Data;
- ExtCore.Data.EntityFramework;
- ExtCore.Mvc;
- ExtCore.Events.
By default, ExtCore doesn’t know anything about data and storage, but you can use ExtCore.Data extension to have unified approach to working with data and single storage context among all the extensions. Storage might be represented by a database, a web API, a file structure or anything else.
Currently it supports MySQL, PostgreSql, SQLite, and SQL Server, but it is very easy to add another storage support.
By default, ExtCore web applications are not MVC ones. MVC support is provided for them by ExtCore.Mvc extension. This extension initializes MVC, makes it possible to use controllers, view components, views (added as resources and/or precompiled), static content (added as resources) from other extensions etc.
It can be used by the extension to notify the code in this or any other extension about some events.
You can find more information using the links at the bottom of this page.
All you need to do to have modular and extendable web application is:
- add ExtCore.WebApplication as dependency to your main web application project;
- call AddExtCore and UseExtCore inside your web application's Startup class;
- implement the ExtCore.Infrastructure.IConfigureServicesAction and IConfigureAction interfaces in your extensions in order to execute some code inside the ConfigureServices and Configure methods of the web application's Startup class (optional);
- tell main web application about the extensions (with implicit dependencies or by copying them into the extensions folder).
Please take a look at our samples on GitHub:
- Full-featured ExtCore 4.0.0 framework sample web application;
- ExtCore framework 4.0.0 sample simplest web application;
- ExtCore framework 4.0.0 sample MVC web application;
- ExtCore framework 4.0.0 sample web application that uses file storage;
- ExtCore framework 4.0.0 sample web application that uses a database;
- ExtCore framework 4.0.0 sample web application that uses Identity;
- ExtCore framework 4.0.0 sample web application with modular UI;
- ExtCore framework 4.0.0 advanced sample web application with modular UI;
- ExtCore framework 4.0.0 advanced sample accounting web application;
- ExtCore framework 4.0.0 sample web application that registers a service inside the extension;
- ExtCore framework 4.0.0 sample web application that uses the events;
- ExtCore framework 4.0.0 sample API web application.
You can also download our ready to use full-featured sample. It contains everything you need to run ExtCore-based web application from Visual Studio 2017, including SQLite database with the test data.
We have written several tutorials to help you start developing your ExtCore-based web applications.
Please take a look at Platformus on GitHub. It is CMS built on ExtCore framework with more than 10 extensions and 80 projects.
To be able to debug an ExtCore extension you need to add the explicit project references to all of its projects to the main web application. When development process is complete, you may remove that references and use the extension as the DLL files.
Website: http://extcore.net/
Docs: http://docs.extcore.net/
Author: http://sikorsky.pro/