AspNetCore.Docs/aspnetcore/signalr/dotnet-client.md

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---
title: ASP.NET Core SignalR .NET Client
author: tdykstra
description: Information about the ASP.NET Core SignalR .NET Client
monikerRange: '>= aspnetcore-2.1'
ms.author: tdykstra
ms.custom: mvc
ms.date: 09/10/2018
uid: signalr/dotnet-client
---
# ASP.NET Core SignalR .NET Client
The ASP.NET Core SignalR .NET client library lets you communicate with SignalR hubs from .NET apps.
> [!NOTE]
> Xamarin has special requirements for Visual Studio version. For more information, see [SignalR Client 2.1.1 in Xamarin](https://github.com/aspnet/Announcements/issues/305).
[View or download sample code](https://github.com/aspnet/Docs/tree/master/aspnetcore/signalr/dotnet-client/sample) ([how to download](xref:tutorials/index#how-to-download-a-sample))
The code sample in this article is a WPF app that uses the ASP.NET Core SignalR .NET client.
## Install the SignalR .NET client package
The `Microsoft.AspNetCore.SignalR.Client` package is needed for .NET clients to connect to SignalR hubs. To install the client library, run the following command in the **Package Manager Console** window:
```powershell
Install-Package Microsoft.AspNetCore.SignalR.Client
```
## Connect to a hub
To establish a connection, create a `HubConnectionBuilder` and call `Build`. The hub URL, protocol, transport type, log level, headers, and other options can be configured while building a connection. Configure any required options by inserting any of the `HubConnectionBuilder` methods into `Build`. Start the connection with `StartAsync`.
[!code-csharp[Build hub connection](dotnet-client/sample/signalrchatclient/MainWindow.xaml.cs?name=snippet_MainWindowClass&highlight=15-17,39)]
## Handle lost connection
Use the <xref:Microsoft.AspNetCore.SignalR.Client.HubConnection.Closed> event to respond to a lost connection. For example, you might want to automate reconnection.
The `Closed` event requires a delegate that returns a `Task`, which allows async code to run without using `async void`. To satisfy the delegate signature in a `Closed` event handler that runs synchronously, return `Task.CompletedTask`:
```csharp
connection.Closed += (error) => {
// Do your close logic.
return Task.CompletedTask;
};
```
The main reason for the async support is so you can restart the connection. Starting a connection is an async action.
In a `Closed` handler that restarts the connection, consider waiting for some random delay to prevent overloading the server, as shown in the following example:
[!code-csharp[Use Closed event handler to automate reconnection](dotnet-client/sample/signalrchatclient/MainWindow.xaml.cs?name=snippet_ClosedRestart)]
## Call hub methods from client
`InvokeAsync` calls methods on the hub. Pass the hub method name and any arguments defined in the hub method to `InvokeAsync`. SignalR is asynchronous, so use `async` and `await` when making the calls.
[!code-csharp[InvokeAsync method](dotnet-client/sample/signalrchatclient/MainWindow.xaml.cs?name=snippet_InvokeAsync)]
## Call client methods from hub
Define methods the hub calls using `connection.On` after building, but before starting the connection.
[!code-csharp[Define client methods](dotnet-client/sample/signalrchatclient/MainWindow.xaml.cs?name=snippet_ConnectionOn)]
The preceding code in `connection.On` runs when server-side code calls it using the `SendAsync` method.
[!code-csharp[Call client method](dotnet-client/sample/signalrchat/hubs/chathub.cs?name=snippet_SendMessage)]
## Error handling and logging
Handle errors with a try-catch statement. Inspect the `Exception` object to determine the proper action to take after an error occurs.
[!code-csharp[Logging](dotnet-client/sample/signalrchatclient/MainWindow.xaml.cs?name=snippet_ErrorHandling)]
## Additional resources
* [Hubs](xref:signalr/hubs)
* [JavaScript client](xref:signalr/javascript-client)
* [Publish to Azure](xref:signalr/publish-to-azure-web-app)