World is now on Opti ID! Learn more

Harinarayanan
Apr 28, 2023
  36
(0 votes)

Content Delivery / Headless API Implementation

Hi,

I was new to the Headless (CD) implementation and learned with the help of existing resources and implemented it successfully for our requirement, so thought of sharing the implementation steps, in case anyone looking for step by step Content Delivery API implementation or Headless Implementation.

 Below are the tools/platforms I 've used for the implementation,

  1. CMS 11 
  2. React 
  3. ContentDeliveryApi.Cms 2.21.1

Step: 1

Install the below packages through the NuGet package manager.

<package id="EPiServer.ContentDeliveryApi" version="2.19.0" targetFramework="net48" />
  <package id="EPiServer.ContentDeliveryApi.Cms" version="2.21.1" targetFramework="net48" />
  <package id="EPiServer.ContentDeliveryApi.Core" version="2.21.1" targetFramework="net48" />
  <package id="EPiServer.ContentDeliveryApi.Forms" version="2.21.1" targetFramework="net48" />

Step: 2

Add the below configs into web.config, I'm not sure 100% knowledge on why this is required but either of those configs should be set to true, and the other one should be set to false, and not both of them set to true or false.

 <add key="episerver:contentdeliverysearch:maphttpattributeroutes" value="true" />
    <add key="episerver:contentdelivery:maphttpattributeroutes" value="false" />

Step: 3

Add a new Initialization module,

using EPiServer.ContentApi.Cms;
using EPiServer.ContentApi.Core.Configuration;
using EPiServer.Framework;
using EPiServer.Framework.Initialization;
using EPiServer.ServiceLocation;
using System;
using System.Linq;

namespace Alloy.Web.Admin.ContentDeliveryApi
{
    [InitializableModule]
    [ModuleDependency(typeof(ContentApiCmsInitialization))]
    public class ContentDeliveryApiInit : IConfigurableModule
    {
        public void ConfigureContainer(ServiceConfigurationContext context)
        {
            context.Services.Configure<ContentApiConfiguration>(config => {
                config.Default().SetMinimumRoles(String.Empty);
            });
        }

        public void Initialize(InitializationEngine context)
        {
            //Add initialization logic, this method is called once after CMS has been initialized
        }

        public void Uninitialize(InitializationEngine context)
        {
            //Add uninitialization logic
        }
    }
}

Once you are done with the above steps you can re-build and run your solution to verify everything okay with the solution.

If you see your solution is working fine, then you can test Content Delivery API by accessing a site content with the help of Visual Studio Code(I feel it's a very feasible tool to access Headless content), In case if you don't have a REST Client in your Visual Studio Code please install the below Extension, It's really useful during our Headless implementation to test content.

Examples:

To get site definitions:

https://localhost:44300/api/episerver/v2.0/site/

To get your page content:

https://localhost:44300/api/episerver/v2.0/content/420003

To Expand the Content Area/Content reference within Content: 

To Get Language-Specific Content: 
In this way, your content is ready to access through Content Delivery API.
Step 4:
If you above all are working as expected we can move on to the next step.
The next will be creating the Content type, ViewModel, Controller, Basic view, and React development for fetching data and rendering data.
In my case had to create all of the above from scratch, maybe your case may differ. So I like to cover those parts in another blog. 
Please feel free to add your comments, questions, thoughts, or any missing steps.
Thanks for reading. Have a good day. 
Apr 28, 2023

Comments

Please login to comment.
Latest blogs
Make Global Assets Site- and Language-Aware at Indexing Time

I had a support case the other day with a question around search on global assets on a multisite. This is the result of that investigation. This co...

dada | Jun 26, 2025

The remote server returned an error: (400) Bad Request – when configuring Azure Storage for an older Optimizely CMS site

How to fix a strange issue that occurred when I moved editor-uploaded files for some old Optimizely CMS 11 solutions to Azure Storage.

Tomas Hensrud Gulla | Jun 26, 2025 |

Enable Opal AI for your Optimizely products

Learn how to enable Opal AI, and meet your infinite workforce.

Tomas Hensrud Gulla | Jun 25, 2025 |

Deploying to Optimizely Frontend Hosting: A Practical Guide

Optimizely Frontend Hosting is a cloud-based solution for deploying headless frontend applications - currently supporting only Next.js projects. It...

Szymon Uryga | Jun 25, 2025

World on Opti ID

We're excited to announce that world.optimizely.com is now integrated with Opti ID! What does this mean for you? New Users:  You can now log in wit...

Patrick Lam | Jun 22, 2025

Avoid Scandinavian Letters in File Names in Optimizely CMS

Discover how Scandinavian letters in file names can break media in Optimizely CMS—and learn a simple code fix to automatically sanitize uploads for...

Henning Sjørbotten | Jun 19, 2025 |