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Home/ Questions/Q 8551065
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 11, 20262026-06-11T14:06:39+00:00 2026-06-11T14:06:39+00:00

I’m working in a project that uses the new ASP.NET WebAPI. My current task

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I’m working in a project that uses the new ASP.NET WebAPI. My current task is to accept an uploaded file. So far, I have used TDD to drive out the WebAPI code, but I’ve hit a wall with uploading. I’m currently following the advice found at http://www.asp.net/web-api/overview/working-with-http/sending-html-form-data,-part-2, but there seems to be no way at all to drive this out of a unit test. In order to get at the file and form data, I have to use MultipartFormDataStreamProvider, which is impossible to mock and/or override. Short of forsaking my TDD approach, what can I do?

Here’s the code from the example:

public Task<HttpResponseMessage> PostFormData()
{
    // Check if the request contains multipart/form-data.
    if (!Request.Content.IsMimeMultipartContent())
    {
        throw new HttpResponseException(HttpStatusCode.UnsupportedMediaType);
    }

    string root = HttpContext.Current.Server.MapPath("~/App_Data");
    var provider = new MultipartFormDataStreamProvider(root);

    // Read the form data and return an async task.
    var task = Request.Content.ReadAsMultipartAsync(provider).
        ContinueWith<HttpResponseMessage>(t =>
        {
            if (t.IsFaulted || t.IsCanceled)
            {
                Request.CreateErrorResponse(HttpStatusCode.InternalServerError, t.Exception);
            }

            // This illustrates how to get the file names.
            foreach (MultipartFileData file in provider.FileData)
            {
                Trace.WriteLine(file.Headers.ContentDisposition.FileName);
                Trace.WriteLine("Server file path: " + file.LocalFileName);
            }
            return Request.CreateResponse(HttpStatusCode.OK);
        });

    return task;
}

The first problem is this line:

var provider = new MultipartFormDataStreamProvider(root);

For starters, to unit test this code, I need to be able to inject such a provider. It does WAY too much in that simple constructor call to be “newing it up” in line. There’s got to be another way. (If not, WebAPI fails)

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-11T14:06:40+00:00Added an answer on June 11, 2026 at 2:06 pm

    The answer is “no”. ASP.NET is an inheritance-based framework. If you’re trying to write composition-based applications, you will, at some point, find friction and road-blocks. Time to switch to something like Nancy.

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