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Sieve

⚗️ Sieve is a simple, clean, and extensible framework for .NET Core that adds sorting, filtering, and pagination functionality out of the box. Most common use case would be for serving ASP.NET Core GET queries.

NuGet Release

Get Sieve on nuget

Usage for ASP.NET Core

In this example, consider an app with a Post entity. We'll use Sieve to add sorting, filtering, and pagination capabilities when GET-ing all available posts.

1. Add required services

Inject the SieveProcessor<TEntity> service for each entity you'd like to use Sieve with. So to use Sieve with Posts, in ConfigureServices in Startup.cs add:

services.AddScoped<ISieveProcessor<Post>, SieveProcessor<Post>>();

2. Tell Sieve which properties you'd like to sort/filter in your models

Sieve will only sort/filter properties that have the attribute [Sieve(CanSort = true, CanFilter = true)] on them (they don't have to be both true). So for our Post entity model example:

public int Id { get; set; }

[Sieve(CanFilter = true, CanSort = true)]
public string Title { get; set; }

[Sieve(CanFilter = true, CanSort = true)]
public int LikeCount { get; set; }

[Sieve(CanFilter = true, CanSort = true)]
public int CommentCount { get; set; }

[Sieve(CanFilter = true, CanSort = true, name = "created")]
public DateTimeOffset DateCreated { get; set; } = DateTimeOffset.UtcNow;

There is also the name parameter that you can use to have a different name for use by clients.

3. Get sort/filter/page queries by using the Sieve model in your controllers

In the action that handles returning Posts, use SieveModel to get the sort/filter/page query. Apply it to your data by injecting SieveProcessor<Post> into the controller and using its ApplyAll method. For instance:

[HttpGet]
public JsonResult GetPosts(SieveModel sieveModel) 
{
    var result = _dbContext.Posts.AsNoTracking(); // Makes read-only queries faster
    result = _sieveProcessor.ApplyAll(sieveModel, result); // Returns `result` after applying the sort/filter/page query in `SieveModel` to it
    return Json(result.ToList());
}

There are also ApplySorting, ApplyFiltering, and ApplyPagination methods.

4. Send a request

Send a request

Add custom sort/filter methods

If you want to add custom sort/filter methods, inject ISieveCustomSortMethods<TEntity> or ISieveCustomFilterMethods<TEntity> with the implementation being a class that has custom sort/filter methods for TEntity.

For instance:

services.AddScoped<ISieveCustomSortMethods<Post>, SieveCustomSortMethodsOfPosts>();
services.AddScoped<ISieveCustomFilterMethods<Post>, SieveCustomFilterMethodsOfPosts>();

Where SieveCustomSortMethodsOfPosts for example is:

public class SieveCustomSortMethodsOfPosts : ISieveCustomSortMethods<Post>
{
    public IQueryable<Post> Popularity(IQueryable<Post> source, bool useThenBy, bool desc) // The method is given an indicator of weather to use ThenBy(), and if the query is descending 
    {
        var result = useThenBy ?
            ((IOrderedQueryable<Post>)source).ThenBy(p => p.LikeCount) : // ThenBy only works on IOrderedQueryable<TEntity>
            source.OrderBy(p => p.LikeCount)
            .ThenBy(p => p.CommentCount)
            .ThenBy(p => p.DateCreated);

        return result; // Must return modified IQueryable<TEntity>
    }
}

And SieveCustomFilterMethodsOfPosts:

public class SieveCustomFilterMethodsOfPosts : ISieveCustomFilterMethods<Post>
{
    public IQueryable<Post> IsNew(IQueryable<Post> source, string op, string value) // The method is given the {Operator} & {Value}
    {
        var result = source.Where(p => p.LikeCount < 100 &&
                                        p.CommentCount < 5);

        return result; // Must return modified IQueryable<TEntity>
    }
}

Configure Sieve

Use the ASP.NET Core options pattern with SieveOptions to tell Sieve where to look for configuration. For example:

services.Configure<SieveOptions>(Configuration.GetSection("Sieve"));

Then you can add the configuration:

{
    "Sieve": {
        "CaseSensitive": `boolean: should property names be case-sensitive? Defaults to false`,
        "DefaultPageSize": `number: optional number to fallback to when no page argument is given`
    }
}

Send a request

With all the above in place, you can now send a GET request that includes a sort/filter/page query. An example:

GET /GetPosts

?sorts=     LikeCount,CommentCount,-created         // sort by likes, then comments, then descendingly by date created 
&filters=   LikeCount>10, Title@=awesome title,     // filter to posts with more than 10 likes, and a title that contains the phrase "awesome title"
&page=      1                                       // get the first page...
&pageSize=  10                                      // ...which contains 10 posts

More formally:

  • sorts is a comma-delimited ordered list of property names to sort by. Adding a - before the name switches to sorting descendingly.
  • filters is a comma-delimited list of {Name}{Operator}{Value} where
    • {Name} is the name of a property with the Sieve attribute or the name of a custom filter method for TEntity
    • {Operator} is one of the Operators (has to be preceeded by a space when using custom filter methods)
    • {Value} is the value to use for filtering
  • page is the number of page to return
  • pageSize is the number of items returned per page

Notes:

  • Don't forget to remove commas from any {Value} fields
  • You can have spaces anywhere except within {Name} or {Operator} fields

Creating your own DSL

You can replace this DSL with your own (eg. use JSON instead) by implementing an ISieveModel. You can use the default SieveModel for reference.

Operators

Operator Meaning
== Equals
!= Not equals
> Greater than
< Less than
>= Greater than or equal to
<= Less than or equal to
@= Contains
_= Starts with

Example project

You can find an example project incorporating most Sieve concepts in SieveTests.

License & Contributing

Sieve is licensed under Apache 2.0. Any contributions highly appreciated!