Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore 1.0.0

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dotnet add package Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore --version 1.0.0                
NuGet\Install-Package Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore -Version 1.0.0                
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="Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore" Version="1.0.0" />                
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore --version 1.0.0                
#r "nuget: Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore, 1.0.0"                
#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 Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore&version=1.0.0

// Install Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore&version=1.0.0                

Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore

Implements the database access abstractions from Light.SharedCore for Entity Framework Core.

Light Logo

License NuGet

How to install

Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore is compiled against .NET 8 and available as a NuGet package. It can be installed via:

  • Package Reference in csproj: <PackageReference Include="Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore" Version="1.0.0" />
  • dotnet CLI: dotnet add package Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore
  • Visual Studio Package Manager Console: Install-Package Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore

Why should you use Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore?

When we implement a service that wants to perform database I/O, we often see Entity Framework Core's DbContext used as a direct dependency. The following code example shows this for a simple CRUD update operation:

public sealed class UpdateContactService
{
    private readonly UpdateContactDtoValidator _validator;
    private readonly MyDbContext _dbContext;

    public UpdateContactService(
        UpdateContactDtoValidator validator,
        MyDbContext dbContext
    )
    {
        _validator = validator;
        _dbContext = dbContext;
    }

    public async Task<IResult> UpdateContactAsync(
        UpdateContactDto contact,
        CancellationToken cancellationToken = default
    )
    {
        if (validator.CheckForErrors(dto, out var errors))
        {
            return Results.BadRequest(errors);
        }
        
        var existingContact = await dbContext
            .Contacts
            .FirstOrDefaultAsync(c => c.Id == dto.Id, cancellationToken);
        
        if (existingContact is null)
        {
            return Results.NotFound();
        }
        
        existingContact.FirstName = dto.FirstName;
        existingContact.LastName = dto.LastName;
        existingContact.Email = dto.Email;
        existingContact.Phone = dto.Phone;
        
        await _dbContext.SaveChangesAsync(cancellationToken);
        
        return Results.NoContent();
    }
}

This piece of domain logic is tightly coupled to Entity Framework Core, it cannot be run without it. In Unit Tests where we want to replace the I/O calls with a test double, we cannot simply implement a mock on our own, we need to rely on the capabilities of mocking frameworks like NSubstitute or Moq which only work by using reflection internally. Furthermore, what if we want to replace EF Core with e.g. Dapper or plain ADO.NET for certain endpoints to benefit from their performance characteristics? While not impossible, this would result in specifics like SQL statements being spread across our business logic, because we did not separate database access from the domain, violating the Single Responsibility Principle.

Instead, I recommend to create an interface that abstracts the database access code. For the example above, it could look like this:

public interface IUpdateContactSession : IAsyncSession
{
    Task<Contact?> GetContactAsync(Guid id, CancellationToken cancellationToken = default);
}

The IAsyncSession interface is part of Light.SharedCore and provides the SaveChangesAsync method as well as the capability to dispose the session. To easily implement this interface, use the abstract base classes of Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore:

public sealed class EfUpdateContactSession : EfAsyncSession<MyDbContext>, IUpdateContactSession
{
    public EfUpdateContactSession(MyDbContext dbContext) : base(dbContext) { }
    
    public Task<Contact?> GetContactAsync(Guid id, CancellationToken cancellationToken = default)
    {
        return DbContext
            .Contacts
            .FirstOrDefaultAsync(c => c.Id == id, cancellationToken);
    }
}

The EfAsyncSession<TDbContext> base class implements IAsyncSession for you and forwards the calls SaveChangesAsync, DisposeAsync, and Dispose to the DbContext. Now, you can refactor the UpdateContactService to use the IUpdateContactSession interface:

public sealed class UpdateContactService
{
    private readonly UpdateContactDtoValidator _validator;
    private readonly IUpdateContactSession _session;

    public UpdateContactService(
        UpdateContactDtoValidator validator,
        IUpdateContactSession session
    )
    {
        _validator = validator;
        _session = session;
    }

    public async Task<IResult> UpdateContactAsync(
        UpdateContactDto contact,
        CancellationToken cancellationToken = default
    )
    {
        if (validator.CheckForErrors(dto, out var errors))
        {
            return Results.BadRequest(errors);
        }
        
        var existingContact = await _session.GetContactAsync(dto.Id, cancellationToken);
        
        if (existingContact is null)
        {
            return Results.NotFound();
        }
        
        existingContact.FirstName = dto.FirstName;
        existingContact.LastName = dto.LastName;
        existingContact.Email = dto.Email;
        existingContact.Phone = dto.Phone;
        
        await _session.SaveChangesAsync(cancellationToken);
        
        return Results.NoContent();
    }
}

For everything to work, don't forget to register the IUpdateContactSession in the dependency injection container:

services.AddScoped<IUpdateContactSession, EfUpdateContactSession>();

You can now easily replace the EfUpdateContactSession with any other implementation of IUpdateContactSession without changing the business logic, and easily implement your own in-memory mock for unit tests.

The base classes of Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore

Light.SharedCore provides two essential interfaces for database access:

  • IAsyncReadOnlySession: represents a connection to the database that only reads data. Data will not be manipulated and thus a SaveChangesAsync method is not available. This interface is implemented by EfAsyncReadOnlySession<TDbContext> in this package. This base class will set the ChangeTracker.QueryTrackingBehavior to NoTrackingWithIdentityResolution by default to avoid overhead - this way, you do not need to call AsNoTracking or AsNoTrackingWithIdentityResolution in your queries. You can adjust this by passing a different queryTrackingBehavior value to the constructor.
  • IAsyncSession: represents a connection to the database which manipulates data. It has an additional SaveChangesAsync method to persist changes to the database. This interface is implemented by EfAsyncSession<TDbContext> in this package - the Query Tracking Behavior is set to TrackAll (the default value for EF Core's DB Context).

If you want to use a dedicated transaction for a session, you can derive from the EfAsyncSession<TDbContext>.WithTransaction or EfAsyncReadOnlySession<TDbContext>.WithTransaction classes. Instead of having a DbContext property, these base classes provide a GetDbContextAsync method which will initialize the transaction upon first retrieval. This underlying transaction will be committed when SaveChangesAsync is called. You can pass the isolation level of the transaction via the constructor, the default value is IsolationLevel.ReadCommitted.

The IUpdateContactSession implementation from above would look like this when using a dedicated transaction:

public sealed class EfUpdateContactSession : EfAsyncSession<MyDbContext>.WithTransaction,
                                             IUpdateContactSession
{
    public EfUpdateContactSession(MyDbContext dbContext)
        : base(dbContext, IsolationLevel.ReadCommitted) { }
    
    public async Task<Contact?> GetContactAsync(Guid id, CancellationToken cancellationToken = default)
    {
        // The first call to GetDbContextAsync initializes the underlying transaction
        var dbContext = await GetDbContextAsync(cancellationToken); 
        return await dbContext
            .Contacts
            .FirstOrDefaultAsync(c => c.Id == id, cancellationToken);
    }
}

Tips and tricks

  • If you have a service that only reads data, use the IAsyncReadOnlySession interface instead of IAsyncSession. Derive your session implementation from EfAsyncReadOnlySession<TDbContext>. This way, you can ensure that no accidental writes are made to the database and follow the Dependency Inversion Principle.
  • Provide a session for each use case: instead of having a single session for all database operations or for a single entity, create a session for each use case (in backend services, this means one DB session per endpoint). This keeps each of your sessions focussed. If you have queries that are used in multiple sessions, place the code in a static method and call it from all sessions. This pattern promotes Vertical Slice Architecture.
  • Do not call SaveChangesAsync multiple times during a scope (in ASP.NET Core, this would be an endpoint call). This will effectively negate the transactional capabilities of the database: what happens if the first SaveChangesAsync call succeeds, but subsequent ones fail? The database will be in an inconsistent state.
  • Do not introduce other disposable resources or finalizers in your session. A session is a Humble Object that represents a connection with an optional transaction to one third-party system. If you want to access different services or resources, create a new session for each of them. If you want to access multiple systems for the same data (e.g. a Redis distributed cache and the database), use pipes and filters with a dedicated session for each filter in the pipeline.
  • The base classes are not implemented in a thread-safe way. Register them as a scoped dependency so that each context has its own instance. Do not use them as a singleton or transient dependency (Microsoft's DI container does not like transient dependencies that implement IDisposable/IAsyncDisposable).
  • Also follow the Dependency Inversion Principle when it comes to the design of your session interface: do not expose database-specific details, like IQueryable<T> or DbSet<T>. Instead, design the interface from the caller's perspective. This way, you can easily replace the underlying database technology without changing the business logic.
  • When designing sessions, be careful about the number of entities that you load into memory with a single operation. In GET endpoints, use proper paging and filtering to avoid loading the entire table into memory, and use AsNoTracking or AsNoTrackingWithIdentityResolution when you don't need change tracking.
Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net8.0 is compatible.  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. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
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Version Downloads Last updated
1.1.0 198 9/18/2024
1.0.1 90 7/17/2024
1.0.0 101 6/14/2024

Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore 1.0.0
--------------------------------
           
- initial release
- use the EfAsyncReadOnlySession<TDbContext> and EfAsyncSession<TDbContext> base classes to easily implement database abstractions designed with Light.SharedCore
- if you require dedicated transactions, derive your sessions from EfAsyncReadOnlySession<TDbContext>.WithTransaction or EfAsyncSession<TDbContext>.WithTransaction
- these sessions automatically handle an appropritate QueryTrackingBehavior: as read-only sessions do not manipulate data, the use NoTrackingWithIdentityResolution by default        
- read all the docs at https://github.com/feO2x/Light.DatabaseAccess.EntityFrameworkCore/