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Remote app session state

Remote app session state will enable communication between the ASP.NET Core and ASP.NET app to retrieve the session state. This is enabled by exposing an endpoint on the ASP.NET app that can be queried to retrieve and set the session state.

HttpSessionState serialization

The HttpSessionState object must be serialized for remote app session state to be enabled. This is accomplished through implementation of the type Microsoft.AspNetCore.SystemWebAdapters.SessionState.Serialization.ISessionSerializer, of which a default binary writer implementation is provided. This is added by the following code:

builder.Services.AddSystemWebAdapters()
    .AddSessionSerializer(options =>
    {
        // Customize session serialization here
    });

Configuration

First, follow the remote app setup instructions to connect the ASP.NET Core and ASP.NET apps. Then, there are just a couple extra extension methods to call to enable remote app session state.

Configuration for ASP.NET Core involves calling AddRemoteAppSession and AddJsonSessionSerializer to register known session item types. The code should look similar to the following:

builder.Services.AddSystemWebAdapters()
    .AddJsonSessionSerializer(options =>
    {
        // Serialization/deserialization requires each session key to be registered to a type
        options.RegisterKey<int>("test-value");
        options.RegisterKey<SessionDemoModel>("SampleSessionItem");
    })
    .AddRemoteAppClient(options =>
    {
        // Provide the URL for the remote app that has enabled session querying
        options.RemoteAppUrl = new(builder.Configuration["ReverseProxy:Clusters:fallbackCluster:Destinations:fallbackApp:Address"]);

        // Provide a strong API key that will be used to authenticate the request on the remote app for querying the session
        options.ApiKey = builder.Configuration["RemoteAppApiKey"];
    })
    .AddSessionClient();

Session support requires additional work for the ASP.NET Core pipeline, and is not turned on by default. It can be configured on a per-route basis via ASP.NET Core metadata.

For example, session support requires either to annotate a controller:

[Session]
public class SomeController : Controller
{
}

or to enable for all endpoints by default:

app.MapDefaultControllerRoute()
    .RequireSystemWebAdapterSession();

The framework equivalent would look like the following change in Global.asax.cs:

SystemWebAdapterConfiguration.AddSystemWebAdapters(this)
    .AddJsonSessionSerializer(options =>
    {
        // Serialization/deserialization requires each session key to be registered to a type
        options.RegisterKey<int>("test-value");
        options.RegisterKey<SessionDemoModel>("SampleSessionItem");
    })
    // Provide a strong API key that will be used to authenticate the request on the remote app for querying the session
    // ApiKey is a string representing a GUID
    .AddRemoteAppServer(options => options.ApiKey = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["RemoteAppApiKey"])
    .AddSessionServer();

Protocol

Readonly

Readonly session will retrieve the session state from the framework app without any sort of locking. This consists of a single GET request that will return a session state and can be closed immediately.

Readonly session will retrieve the session state from the framework app

Writeable

Writeable session state protocol starts with the same as the readonly, but differs in the following:

  • Requires an additional PUT request to update the state
  • The initial GET request must be kept open until the session is done; if closed, the session will not be able to be updated

Writeable session state protocol starts with the same as the readonly