using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Collections;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Runtime.Serialization;
using ServiceStack;
using ServiceStack.DataAnnotations;
using Test.ServiceModel;
using Test.ServiceModel.Types;
namespace ServiceStack
{
[DataContract]
public partial class QueryResponse<T>
{
[DataMember(Order=1)]
public virtual int Offset { get; set; }
[DataMember(Order=2)]
public virtual int Total { get; set; }
[DataMember(Order=3)]
public virtual List<Poco> Results { get; set; }
[DataMember(Order=4)]
public virtual Dictionary<string, string> Meta { get; set; }
[DataMember(Order=5)]
public virtual ResponseStatus ResponseStatus { get; set; }
}
}
namespace Test.ServiceModel
{
public partial class HelloQueryResponse
{
public virtual List<string> Names { get; set; } = [];
}
}
namespace Test.ServiceModel.Types
{
public partial class Poco
{
public virtual string Name { get; set; }
}
}
To override the Content-type in your clients, use the HTTP Accept Header, append the .other suffix or ?format=other
The following are sample HTTP requests and responses. The placeholders shown need to be replaced with actual values.
POST /jsonl/reply/HelloQueryResponse HTTP/1.1
Host: test.servicestack.net
Accept: text/jsonl
Content-Type: text/jsonl
Content-Length: length
{"names":["String"]}
HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: text/jsonl Content-Length: length {"offset":0,"total":0,"results":["String"],"meta":{"String":"String"},"responseStatus":{"errorCode":"String","message":"String","stackTrace":"String","errors":[{"errorCode":"String","fieldName":"String","message":"String","meta":{"String":"String"}}],"meta":{"String":"String"}}}