This change introduces some new heuristics to make it easier to use 'page' or other resevered parameter names as parameters in URL generation. -- The main change here is to allow the link generation tree to *ignore* a value passed in to URL generation when it conflicts with an endpoint's required values. The main concern of this feature area is "how do we tell whether you are linking to an action or a page?". Routing attempts to do the right thing will requiring very little from the user in terms of expressing intent. In this case, we try to tell the difference between an attempt to generate a link to an action due to the presence of the 'action' parameter and absence of the 'page' parameter. This obviously doesn't work when you want to use 'page' as a non-reserved parameter in an action. The same case occurs for pages, but users are already used to the idea that 'action' is a reserved word in MVC. We can loosen this restriction when the value that's supplied for 'page' is known not to be any existing value of the 'page' route value. This approach seems somewhat reasonable but has many of the problems inherent to this area. When it fails (the value you want to use for 'page' causes a conflict) - it's going to be esoteric and hard to understand. |
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README.md
ASP.NET Core
ASP.NET Core is an open-source and cross-platform framework for building modern cloud based internet connected applications, such as web apps, IoT apps and mobile backends. ASP.NET Core apps can run on .NET Core or on the full .NET Framework. It was architected to provide an optimized development framework for apps that are deployed to the cloud or run on-premises. It consists of modular components with minimal overhead, so you retain flexibility while constructing your solutions. You can develop and run your ASP.NET Core apps cross-platform on Windows, Mac and Linux. Learn more about ASP.NET Core.
Get Started
Follow the Getting Started instructions in the ASP.NET Core docs.
Also check out the .NET Homepage for released versions of .NET, getting started guides, and learning resources.
How to Engage, Contribute, and Give Feedback
Some of the best ways to contribute are to try things out, file issues, join in design conversations, and make pull-requests.
- Download our latest daily builds
- Follow along with the development of ASP.NET Core:
- Community Standup: The community standup is held every week and streamed live to YouTube. You can view past standups in the linked playlist.
- Roadmap: The schedule and milestone themes for ASP.NET Core.
- Build ASP.NET Core source code
- Check out the contributing page to see the best places to log issues and start discussions.
Reporting security issues and bugs
Security issues and bugs should be reported privately, via email, to the Microsoft Security Response Center (MSRC) secure@microsoft.com. You should receive a response within 24 hours. If for some reason you do not, please follow up via email to ensure we received your original message. Further information, including the MSRC PGP key, can be found in the Security TechCenter.
Related projects
These are some other repos for related projects:
- Documentation - documentation sources for https://docs.microsoft.com/aspnet/core/
- Entity Framework Core - data access technology
- Extensions - Logging, configuration, dependency injection, and more.
Code of conduct
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.