Because ServiceStack.Text performs much better

I recently stumbled across a comparison of JSON serialization libraries. which shows that ServiceStack.Text by far outperforms any of the competitors. Indeed, the folks down at ServiceStack have been building a lot of great stuff for the past few (4?) years to facilitate their framework.
ServiceStack.Text is available on Nuget and can be used outside of ServiceStack, within any .NET project, so why not use it with Web API, replacing the default serializer, JSON.NET?

Let’s do that.

Creating a ServiceStack.Text MediaTypeFormatter

Typically, whenever you want to introduce a new serialziation mechanism to ASP.NET Web API, you’d create a new MediaTypeFormatter. This case is no different. Let’s grab ServiceStack.Text from Nuget:

Shell
Install-Package ServiceStack.Text

Once you have it refrenced in your solution, the formatter is pretty straight forward:

C#
public class ServiceStackTextFormatter : MediaTypeFormatter
    {
        public ServiceStackTextFormatter()
        {
            JsConfig.DateHandler = JsonDateHandler.ISO8601;
            SupportedMediaTypes.Add(new MediaTypeHeaderValue("application/json"));
 
            SupportedEncodings.Add(new UTF8Encoding(encoderShouldEmitUTF8Identifier: false, throwOnInvalidBytes: true));
            SupportedEncodings.Add(new UnicodeEncoding(bigEndian: false, byteOrderMark: true, throwOnInvalidBytes: true));
        }
 
        public override bool CanReadType(Type type)
        {
            if (type == null) throw new ArgumentNullException("type");
            return true;
        }
 
        public override bool CanWriteType(Type type)
        {
            if (type == null) throw new ArgumentNullException("type");
            return true;
        }
 
        public override Task<object> ReadFromStreamAsync(Type type, Stream readStream, System.Net.Http.HttpContent content, IFormatterLogger formatterLogger)
        {
            var task = Task<object>.Factory.StartNew(() => JsonSerializer.DeserializeFromStream(type, readStream));
            return task;
        }
 
        public override Task WriteToStreamAsync(Type type, object value, Stream writeStream, System.Net.Http.HttpContent content, TransportContext transportContext)
        {
            var task = Task.Factory.StartNew(() => JsonSerializer.SerializeToStream(value, type, writeStream));
            return task;
        }
    }

We tell the formatter a few things:
– we will support application/json media type
– we support UtF-8 and Unicode encoding
– Read and Write is available for all types of objects
– we tell ServiceStack to handle dates as ISO8601, to avoid JSON dates with Unix Epoch milliseconds (read more here)
– in the read/write methods we simply asynchronously call the respective methods of the ServiceStack.Text.JsonSerializer

Replacing JSON.NET

Now, in order to wire this up, we need to remove the default JSON formatter (JSON.NET) and inject our new formatter into the GlobalConfiguration.Formatters collection.

C#
public static void Register(HttpConfiguration config)
{
    config.Formatters.RemoveAt(0);
    config.Formatters.Insert(0, new ServiceStackTextFormatter());
 
    //continue with config    
}

And that’s it!

From now your ASP.NET Web API application will be using ServiceStack.Text, a serializer which benchmarks show is almost 2x faster than JSON.NET. In all fairness, that’s one of the micro optimizations, but still, if you can improve something, why not do that?

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