EventFlow.Sql 0.71.3834

Prefix Reserved
There is a newer version of this package available.
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package EventFlow.Sql --version 0.71.3834                
NuGet\Install-Package EventFlow.Sql -Version 0.71.3834                
This command is intended to be used within the Package Manager Console in Visual Studio, as it uses the NuGet module's version of Install-Package.
<PackageReference Include="EventFlow.Sql" Version="0.71.3834" />                
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add EventFlow.Sql --version 0.71.3834                
#r "nuget: EventFlow.Sql, 0.71.3834"                
#r directive can be used in F# Interactive and Polyglot Notebooks. Copy this into the interactive tool or source code of the script to reference the package.
// Install EventFlow.Sql as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=EventFlow.Sql&version=0.71.3834

// Install EventFlow.Sql as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=EventFlow.Sql&version=0.71.3834                

Generic SQL support for EventFlow

Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net5.0 was computed.  net5.0-windows was computed.  net6.0 was computed.  net6.0-android was computed.  net6.0-ios was computed.  net6.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net6.0-macos was computed.  net6.0-tvos was computed.  net6.0-windows was computed.  net7.0 was computed.  net7.0-android was computed.  net7.0-ios was computed.  net7.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net7.0-macos was computed.  net7.0-tvos was computed.  net7.0-windows was computed.  net8.0 was computed.  net8.0-android was computed.  net8.0-browser was computed.  net8.0-ios was computed.  net8.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net8.0-macos was computed.  net8.0-tvos was computed.  net8.0-windows was computed. 
.NET Core netcoreapp1.0 was computed.  netcoreapp1.1 was computed.  netcoreapp2.0 was computed.  netcoreapp2.1 was computed.  netcoreapp2.2 was computed.  netcoreapp3.0 was computed.  netcoreapp3.1 was computed. 
.NET Standard netstandard1.6 is compatible.  netstandard2.0 is compatible.  netstandard2.1 was computed. 
.NET Framework net452 is compatible.  net46 was computed.  net461 was computed.  net462 was computed.  net463 was computed.  net47 was computed.  net471 was computed.  net472 was computed.  net48 was computed.  net481 was computed. 
MonoAndroid monoandroid was computed. 
MonoMac monomac was computed. 
MonoTouch monotouch was computed. 
Tizen tizen30 was computed.  tizen40 was computed.  tizen60 was computed. 
Xamarin.iOS xamarinios was computed. 
Xamarin.Mac xamarinmac was computed. 
Xamarin.TVOS xamarintvos was computed. 
Xamarin.WatchOS xamarinwatchos was computed. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.

NuGet packages (3)

Showing the top 3 NuGet packages that depend on EventFlow.Sql:

Package Downloads
EventFlow.MsSql

# EventFlow ![EventFlow logo](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/eventflow/EventFlow/develop-v1/icon-128.png) ``` $ dotnet add package EventFlow ``` EventFlow is a basic CQRS+ES framework designed to be easy to use. Have a look at our [getting started guide](https://geteventflow.net/getting-started/), the [do’s and don’ts](https://geteventflow.net/additional/dos-and-donts/) and the [FAQ](https://geteventflow.net/additional/faq/). Alternatively, join our [Discord](https://discord.gg/QfgNPs5WxR) server to engage with the community. Its hopefully getting a reboot to kickstart the upcoming release of v1. ## Features * **Easy to use**: Designed with sensible defaults and implementations that make it easy to create an example application * **Highly configurable and extendable**: EventFlow uses interfaces for every part of its core, making it easy to replace or extend existing features with custom implementation * **No use of threads or background workers** * **MIT licensed** Easy to understand and use license for enterprise ## Versions Development of version 1.0 has started and is mainly braking changes regarding changes related to replacing EventFlow types with that of Microsoft extension abstractions, mainly `IServiceProvider` and `ILogger<>`. The following list key characteristics of each version as well as its related branches (not properly configured yet). * `1.x` Represents the next iteration of EventFlow that aligns EventFlow with the standard packages for .NET. Releases here will only support .NET Standard, .NET Core and .NET versions 6+ going forward. - Released - Still development - Not all projects migrated yet Read the [migration guide](https://geteventflow.net/migrations/v0-to-v1/) to view the full list of breaking changes as well as recommendations on how to migrate. ### Documentation Version 1.x documentation has been pulled into this repository in order to have the code and documentation closer together and have the documentation updated in the same pull-requests as any code changes. The compiled version of the documentation is available at https://geteventflow.net/. ### NuGet package status - 🟢 ported - 💚 newly added to 1.0 - 🟠 not yet ported to 1.0 - 💀 for packages that are removed as part of 1.0 (see the [migration guide](https://geteventflow.net/migrations/v0-to-v1/) for details) Projects - 🟢 `EventFlow` - 🟠 `EventFlow.AspNetCore` - 💀 `EventFlow.Autofac` - 💀 `EventFlow.DependencyInjection` - 🟠 `EventFlow.Elasticsearch` - 🟠 `EventFlow.EntityFramework` - 🟠 `EventFlow.EventStores.EventStore` - 🟢 `EventFlow.Hangfire` - 🟢 `EventFlow.MongoDB` - 🟢 `EventFlow.MsSql` - 💀 `EventFlow.Owin` - 🟢 `EventFlow.PostgreSql` - 💚 `EventFlow.Redis` - 🟠 `EventFlow.RabbitMQ` - 🟢 `EventFlow.Sql` - 🟠 `EventFlow.SQLite` - 🟢 `EventFlow.TestHelpers` ### Branches - `develop-v1`: Development branch, pull requests should be done here - `release-v1`: Release branch, merge commits are done to this branch from `develop-v1` to create releases. Typically each commit represents a release * `0.x` (legacy) The current stable version of EventFlow and has been the version of EventFlow for almost six years. 0.x versions have .NET Framework support and limited support to the Microsoft extension packages through extra NuGet packages. Feature and bug fix releases will still be done while there's interest in the community. ### Branches - `develop-v0`: Development branch, pull requests should be done here - `release-v0`: Release branch, merge commits are done to this branch from `develop-v0` to create releases. Typically each commit represents a release ### Documentation Version 0.x documentation is (although a bit outdated) is live at https://docs.geteventflow.net/.

EventFlow.PostgreSql

# EventFlow ![EventFlow logo](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/eventflow/EventFlow/develop-v1/icon-128.png) ``` $ dotnet add package EventFlow ``` EventFlow is a basic CQRS+ES framework designed to be easy to use. Have a look at our [getting started guide](https://geteventflow.net/getting-started/), the [do’s and don’ts](https://geteventflow.net/additional/dos-and-donts/) and the [FAQ](https://geteventflow.net/additional/faq/). Alternatively, join our [Discord](https://discord.gg/QfgNPs5WxR) server to engage with the community. Its hopefully getting a reboot to kickstart the upcoming release of v1. ## Features * **Easy to use**: Designed with sensible defaults and implementations that make it easy to create an example application * **Highly configurable and extendable**: EventFlow uses interfaces for every part of its core, making it easy to replace or extend existing features with custom implementation * **No use of threads or background workers** * **MIT licensed** Easy to understand and use license for enterprise ## Versions Development of version 1.0 has started and is mainly braking changes regarding changes related to replacing EventFlow types with that of Microsoft extension abstractions, mainly `IServiceProvider` and `ILogger<>`. The following list key characteristics of each version as well as its related branches (not properly configured yet). * `1.x` Represents the next iteration of EventFlow that aligns EventFlow with the standard packages for .NET. Releases here will only support .NET Standard, .NET Core and .NET versions 6+ going forward. - Released - Still development - Not all projects migrated yet Read the [migration guide](https://geteventflow.net/migrations/v0-to-v1/) to view the full list of breaking changes as well as recommendations on how to migrate. ### Documentation Version 1.x documentation has been pulled into this repository in order to have the code and documentation closer together and have the documentation updated in the same pull-requests as any code changes. The compiled version of the documentation is available at https://geteventflow.net/. ### NuGet package status - 🟢 ported - 💚 newly added to 1.0 - 🟠 not yet ported to 1.0 - 💀 for packages that are removed as part of 1.0 (see the [migration guide](https://geteventflow.net/migrations/v0-to-v1/) for details) Projects - 🟢 `EventFlow` - 🟠 `EventFlow.AspNetCore` - 💀 `EventFlow.Autofac` - 💀 `EventFlow.DependencyInjection` - 🟠 `EventFlow.Elasticsearch` - 🟠 `EventFlow.EntityFramework` - 🟠 `EventFlow.EventStores.EventStore` - 🟢 `EventFlow.Hangfire` - 🟢 `EventFlow.MongoDB` - 🟢 `EventFlow.MsSql` - 💀 `EventFlow.Owin` - 🟢 `EventFlow.PostgreSql` - 💚 `EventFlow.Redis` - 🟠 `EventFlow.RabbitMQ` - 🟢 `EventFlow.Sql` - 🟠 `EventFlow.SQLite` - 🟢 `EventFlow.TestHelpers` ### Branches - `develop-v1`: Development branch, pull requests should be done here - `release-v1`: Release branch, merge commits are done to this branch from `develop-v1` to create releases. Typically each commit represents a release * `0.x` (legacy) The current stable version of EventFlow and has been the version of EventFlow for almost six years. 0.x versions have .NET Framework support and limited support to the Microsoft extension packages through extra NuGet packages. Feature and bug fix releases will still be done while there's interest in the community. ### Branches - `develop-v0`: Development branch, pull requests should be done here - `release-v0`: Release branch, merge commits are done to this branch from `develop-v0` to create releases. Typically each commit represents a release ### Documentation Version 0.x documentation is (although a bit outdated) is live at https://docs.geteventflow.net/.

EventFlow.SQLite

# EventFlow <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0> <tr> <td width=25%> <img src=./icon-128.png /> </td> <td width=25%> <p> <a href=https://www.nuget.org/packages/EventFlow/><img src=https://img.shields.io/nuget/v/EventFlow.svg?style=flat /></a> </p> <p> <a href=https://docs.geteventflow.net/?badge=latest><img src=https://readthedocs.org/projects/eventflow/badge/?version=latest /></a> </p> </td> <td width=25%> <p> <a href=https://ci.appveyor.com/project/eventflow/eventflow><img src=https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/51yvhvbd909e4o82/branch/develop?svg=true /></a> </p> <p> <a href=https://gitter.im/rasmus/EventFlow?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge&utm_content=badge><img src=https://badges.gitter.im/Join Chat.svg /></a> </p> <!-- <p> <a href=https://codecov.io/github/eventflow/EventFlow?branch=develop><img src=https://codecov.io/github/eventflow/EventFlow/coverage.svg?branch=develop /></a> </p> --> </td> <td width=25%> Think EventFlow is great,<br/> <a href=https://www.paypal.me/rasmusnu>buy me a cup of coffee</a> </td> </tr> </table> NuGet feeds - Official releases: https://www.nuget.org/packages/EventFlow/ - Builds: https://ci.appveyor.com/nuget/eventflow EventFlow is a basic CQRS+ES framework designed to be easy to use. Have a look at our [getting started guide](https://docs.geteventflow.net/GettingStarted.html), the [do’s and don’ts](https://docs.geteventflow.net/DosAndDonts.html) and the [FAQ](https://docs.geteventflow.net/FAQ.html). ### Features * **CQRS+ES framework** * **Async/await first:** Every part of EventFlow is written using async/await. * **Highly configurable and extendable** * **Easy to use** * **No use of threads or background workers** * **Cancellation:** All methods that does IO work or might delay execution (due to retries), takes a `CancellationToken` argument to allow you to cancel the operation ### Examples * **[Complete](#complete-example):** Shows a complete example on how to use EventFlow with in-memory event store and read models in a relatively few lines of code * **Shipping:** To get a more complete example of how EventFlow _could_ be used, have a look at the shipping example found here in the code base. The example is based on the shipping example from the book Domain-Driven Design - Tackling Complexity in the Heart of Software by Eric Evans. Its _in-progress_, but should provide inspiration on how to use EventFlow on a larger scale. If you have ideas and/or comments, create a pull request or an issue

GitHub repositories

This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.

Version Downloads Last updated
1.0.5007 162 11/16/2024
1.0.5004-alpha 830 5/23/2024
1.0.5003-alpha 5,374 6/21/2023
1.0.5002-alpha 794 11/11/2022
1.0.5001-alpha 1,178 3/15/2022
1.0.4748-alpha 10,624 9/9/2021
1.0.4617-alpha 888 6/11/2021
0.84.4 196 11/16/2024
0.83.4713 442,420 9/7/2021
0.82.4684 1,691 8/30/2021
0.82.4659 8,929 6/17/2021
0.81.4483 123,417 12/14/2020
0.80.4377 56,248 10/1/2020
0.79.4216 59,820 5/13/2020
0.78.4205 2,059 5/11/2020
0.77.4077 36,790 12/10/2019
0.76.4014 7,608 10/19/2019
0.75.3970 3,777 9/12/2019
0.74.3948 6,837 7/1/2019
0.73.3933 3,084 6/11/2019
0.72.3914 5,040 5/28/2019
0.71.3834 5,860 4/17/2019
0.70.3824 2,525 4/11/2019
0.69.3772 5,338 2/12/2019
0.68.3728 12,589 12/3/2018
0.67.3697 3,996 10/14/2018
0.66.3673 2,728 9/28/2018
0.65.3664 6,205 9/22/2018
0.64.3598 5,154 8/27/2018
0.63.3581 2,772 8/7/2018
0.62.3569 2,211 7/5/2018
0.61.3524 2,645 6/26/2018
0.60.3490 2,022 6/18/2018
0.59.3396 2,282 5/23/2018
0.58.3377 1,972 5/13/2018
0.57.3359 2,055 4/30/2018
0.56.3328 1,683 4/24/2018
0.55.3323 1,652 4/24/2018
0.54.3261 1,831 2/25/2018
0.53.3204 1,794 1/25/2018
0.52.3178 1,717 11/2/2017
0.51.3155 1,677 10/25/2017
0.50.3124 1,741 10/21/2017
0.49.3031 2,121 9/7/2017
0.48.2937 2,024 7/11/2017
0.47.2894 1,692 6/28/2017
0.46.2886 1,774 5/29/2017
0.45.2877 1,807 5/28/2017
0.44.2832 2,226 5/12/2017
0.43.2806 1,525 5/5/2017
0.42.2755 1,989 5/2/2017
0.41.2727 1,944 4/27/2017
0.40.2590 5,138 3/30/2017
0.39.2553 2,110 1/16/2017
0.38.2454 2,140 12/2/2016
0.37.2424 2,280 11/8/2016
0.36.2315 3,110 10/18/2016
0.35.2247 2,178 9/6/2016
0.34.2221 1,968 8/23/2016
0.33.2190 1,913 8/16/2016
0.32.2163 1,989 7/4/2016
0.31.2106 2,014 6/30/2016
0.30.2019 2,377 6/16/2016
0.29.1973 3,654 4/19/2016
0.28.1852 1,996 4/5/2016
0.27.1765 5,525 2/25/2016
0.26.1714 2,024 2/20/2016

Breaking: Commands published from AggregateSaga which return `false`
in `IExecutionResult.IsSuccess` will newly lead to an exception being thrown.
For disabling all new changes just set protected property
`AggregateSaga.ThrowExceptionsOnFailedPublish` to `false` in your AggregateSaga constructor.
Also an Exception thrown from any command won't prevent other commands from being executed.
All exceptions will be collected and then re-thrown in SagaPublishException (even in case
of just one Exception). The exception structure is following:
- SagaPublishException : AggregateException
- .InnerExceptions
- CommandException : Exception
- .CommandType
- .SourceId
- .InnerException # in case of an exception thrown from the command
- CommandException : Exception
- .CommandType
- .SourceId
- .ExecutionResult # in case of returned `false` in `IExecutionResult.IsSuccess`
You need to update your `ISagaErrorHandler` implementation to reflect new exception structure,
unless you disable this new feature.
Fix: MongoDB read store no longer throws an exception on non-existing read models (#625)