This repository contains the source code for Dwolla's C#-based SDK, which allows developers to interact with Dwolla's server-side API via a C# API. Any action that can be performed via an HTTP request can be made using this SDK when executed within a server-side environment.
To begin using this SDK, you will first need to download it to your machine. We use NuGet to distribute this package. Check out the Microsoft documentation for more information on how to install and manage packages from Nuget using Visual Studio.
Here's an example using the Package Manager Console
$ Install-Package Dwolla.Client -Version 5.2.2
Before any API requests can be made, you must first determine which environment you will be using, as well as fetch the application key and secret. To fetch your application key and secret, please visit one of the following links:
Finally, you can create an instance of DwollaClient
by specifying which environment you will be
using—Production or Sandbox—via the isSandbox
boolean flag.
var client = DwollaClient.Create(isSandbox: true);
Application access tokens are used to authenticate against the API on behalf of an application.
Application tokens can be used to access resources in the API that either belong to the application
itself (webhooks
, events
, webhook-subscriptions
) or the Dwolla Account that owns the
application (accounts
, customers
, funding-sources
, etc.). Application tokens are obtained by
using the client_credentials
OAuth grant type:
var tokenRes = await client.PostAuthAsync<AppTokenRequest, TokenResponse>(
new Uri($"{client.AuthBaseAddress}/token"),
new AppTokenRequest {Key = "...", Secret = "..."});
_Application access tokens are short-lived: 1 hour. They do not include a refresh_token
. When it
expires, generate a new one using AppTokenRequest
._
Once you've created a DwollaClient
, currently, you can make low-level HTTP requests.
To make low-level HTTP requests, you can use the GetAsync()
, PostAsync()
, UploadAsync()
and
DeleteAsync()
methods with the available
request models.
These methods will return responses that can be mapped to one of the available
response models.
To specify headers for a request (e.g., Authorization
), you can pass a Headers
object as the
last argument.
var headers = new Headers {{"Authorization", $"Bearer {tokenRes.Content.Token}"}};
client.GetAsync<GetCustomersResponse>(url, headers);
GET
// GET api.dwolla.com/customers
var url = new Uri("https://api.dwolla.com/customers");
client.GetAsync<GetCustomersResponse>(url);
POST
// POST api.dwolla.com/customers
var url = new Uri("https://api.dwolla.com/customers/");
var request = new CreateCustomerRequest
{
FirstName = "Jane",
LastName = "Doe",
Email = "jane.doe@email.com"
};
var res = await PostAsync<CreateCustomerRequest, EmptyResponse>(url, request, headers);
//res.Response.Headers.Location => "https://api-sandbox.dwolla.com/customers/fc451a7a-ae30-4404-aB95-e3553fcd733f
// POST api.dwolla.com/customers/{id}/documents multipart/form-data foo=...
var url = new Uri("https://api-sandbox.dwolla.com/customers/{id}/documents");
var request = new UploadDocumentRequest
{
DocumentType = "idCard",
Document = new File
{
ContentType = "image/png",
Filename = "filename.jpg",
Stream = fileStream
}
};
client.UploadAsync<UploadDocumentRequest, EmptyResponse>(url, request, headers);
DELETE
// DELETE api.dwolla.com/resource
var url = "https://api.dwolla.com/labels/{id}"
client.DeleteAsync<object>(url, null);
Take a look at the
Example Application for examples
on how to use the available C# models to call the Dwolla API. Before you can begin using the app,
however, you will need to specify a DWOLLA_APP_KEY
and DWOLLA_APP_SECRET
environment variable.
If you prefer to use Docker to run ExampleApp locally, a Dockerfile file is included in the root
directory. You can either build the Docker image with your API key and secret (by passing the values
via CLI), or you can specify the values for the app_key
and app_secret
build arguments in
Dockerfile. Finally, you will need to build and run the Docker image. More information on this topic
can be found on Docker's website, or you can find some
example commands below.
# Building container by specifying build arguments.
# In this configuration, you will not need to modify Dockerfile. All of the
# necessary arguments are passed via Docker's `--build-arg` option.
$ docker build \
--build-arg app_key=YOUR_API_KEY \
--build-arg app_secret=YOUR_APP_SECRET \
-t dwolla/csharp-example-app:latest .
# Building container without specifying build arguments.
# In this configuration, you will need to specify your account API key and
# secret (retrieved from Dwolla) in the Dockerfile file.
$ docker build -t dwolla/csharp-example-app:latest .
# Running Docker container in interactive shell
$ docker run --init -it dwolla/csharp-example-app:latest
amount.value
) caused a DeserializationException
. The JsonSerializerOptions
in DwollaClient
has been updated with JsonNumberHandling.AllowReadingFromString
to support both quoted and unquoted numeric values, ensuring compatibility with varied API responses. LableLedgerEntry.cs
to LabelLedgerEntry.cs
to fix a typo in the file name. This change does not impact the functionality of existing integrations.netstandard2.0
in line with Microsoft's recommendation to
avoid targeting netstandard1.x
. Users of the SDK will need to update their applications to
target netstandard2.0
or a later version to use the updated SDK.Newtonsoft.Json
with System.Text.Json
to remove external dependencies.HttpClient
in DwollaClient
to adhere to
Microsoft's HttpClient guidelines for .NET.Newtonsoft.Json
to version 13.0.1using
to ExampleAppnetcoreapp2.0
.
Breaking changes:
EmptyResponse
instead of object
in DwollaClient intefacestring
-> DateTime?
. Create base
responses, refactor ExampleApp to tasks, add Funding Source modelsTo learn more about Dwolla and how to integrate our product with your application, please consider visiting the following resources and becoming a member of our community!