Devlooped.TableStorage.Source 2.0.2

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There is a newer version of this package available.
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package Devlooped.TableStorage.Source --version 2.0.2                
NuGet\Install-Package Devlooped.TableStorage.Source -Version 2.0.2                
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="Devlooped.TableStorage.Source" Version="2.0.2" />                
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add Devlooped.TableStorage.Source --version 2.0.2                
#r "nuget: Devlooped.TableStorage.Source, 2.0.2"                
#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 Devlooped.TableStorage.Source as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=Devlooped.TableStorage.Source&version=2.0.2

// Install Devlooped.TableStorage.Source as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=Devlooped.TableStorage.Source&version=2.0.2                

Icon TableStorage

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Repository pattern with POCO object support for storing to Azure/CosmosDB Table Storage

Screenshot of basic usage

Usage

Given an entity like:

public record Product(string Category, string Id) 
{
  public string? Title { get; init; }
  public double Price { get; init; }
}

NOTE: entity can have custom constructor, key properties can be read-only, and it doesn't need to inherit from anything, implement any interfaces or use any custom attributes (unless you want to). As shown above, it can even be a simple record type!

The entity can be stored and retrieved with:

var storageAccount = CloudStorageAccount.DevelopmentStorageAccount; // or production one
// We lay out the parameter names for clarity only.
var repo = TableRepository.Create<Product>(storageAccount, 
    tableName: "Products",
    partitionKey: p => p.Category, 
    rowKey: p => p.Id);

var product = new Product("Book", "1234") 
{
  Title = "Table Storage is Cool",
  Price = 25.5,
};

// Insert or Update behavior (aka "upsert")
await repo.PutAsync(product);

// Enumerate all products in category "Book"
await foreach (var p in repo.EnumerateAsync("Book"))
   Console.WriteLine(p.Price);

// Query books priced in the 20-50 range, 
// project just title + price
await foreach (var info in from prod in repo.CreateQuery()
                           where prod.Price >= 20 and prod.Price <= 50
                           select new { prod.Title, prod.Price })
  Console.WriteLine($"{info.Title}: {info.Price}");

// Get previously saved product.
Product saved = await repo.GetAsync("Book", "1234");

// Delete product
await repo.DeleteAsync("Book", "1234");

// Can also delete passing entity
await repo.DeleteAsync(saved);

If a unique identifier among all entities already exists, you can also store all entities in a single table, using a fixed partition key matching the entity type name, for example. In such a case, instead of a TableRepository, you can use a TablePartition:

public record Book(string ISBN, string Title, string Author, BookFormat Format, int Pages);
var storageAccount = CloudStorageAccount.DevelopmentStorageAccount; // or production one

// Leverage defaults: TableName=Entities, PartitionKey=Book
var repo = TablePartition.Create<Region>(storageAccount, 
  rowKey: book => book.ISBN);

// insert/get/delete same API shown above.

// query filtering by rowKey, in this case, books by a certain 
// language/publisher combination. For Disney/Hyperion in English, 
// for example: ISBNs starting with 978(prefix)-1(english)-4231(publisher)
var query = from book in repo.CreateQuery()
            where 
                book.ISBN.CompareTo("97814231") >= 0 &&
                book.ISBN.CompareTo("97814232") < 0
            select new { book.ISBN, book.Title };

await foreach (var book in query)
   ...

For the books example above, it might make sense to partition by author, for example. In that case, you could use a TableRepository<Book> when saving:

var repo = TableRepository.Create<Book>(storageAccount, "Books", x => x.Author, x => x.ISBN);

await repo.PutAsync(book);

And later on when listing/filtering books by a particular author, you can use a TablePartition<Book> so all querying is automatically scoped to that author:

var partition = TablePartition.Create<Book>(storageAccount, "Books", "Rick Riordan", x => x.ISBN);

// Get Rick Riordan books, only from Disney/Hyperion, with over 1000 pages
var query = from book in repo.CreateQuery()
            where 
                book.ISBN.CompareTo("97814231") >= 0 &&
                book.ISBN.CompareTo("97814232") < 0 && 
                book.Pages >= 1000
            select new { book.ISBN, book.Title };

Using table partitions is quite convenient for handling reference data too, for example. Enumerating all entries in the partition wouldn't be something you'd typically do for your "real" data, but for reference data, it could come in handy.

Stored entities use individual columns for properties, which makes it easy to browse the data (and query, as shown above!). If you don't need the individual columns, and would like a document-like storage mechanism instead, you can use the DocumentRepository.Create and DocumentPartition.Create factory methods instead. The API is otherwise the same, but you can see the effect of using one or the other in the following screenshots of the Storage Explorer for the same Product entity shown in the first example above:

Screenshot of entity persisted with separate columns for properties

Screenshot of entity persisted as a document

The code that persisted both entities is:

var repo = TableRepository.Create<Product>(
    CloudStorageAccount.DevelopmentStorageAccount,
    tableName: "Products",
    partitionKey: p => p.Category,
    rowKey: p => p.Id);

await repo.PutAsync(new Product("book", "9781473217386")
{
    Title = "Neuromancer",
    Price = 7.32
});

var docs = DocumentRepository.Create<Product>(
    CloudStorageAccount.DevelopmentStorageAccount,
    tableName: "Documents",
    partitionKey: p => p.Category,
    rowKey: p => p.Id);

await docs.PutAsync(new Product("book", "9781473217386")
{
    Title = "Neuromancer",
    Price = 7.32
});

The Type column persisted in the table is the Type.FullName of the persited entity, and the Version is the Major.Minor of its assembly, which could be used for advanced data migration scenarios. The major and minor version components are also provided as individual columns for easier querying by various version ranges, using IDocumentRepository.EnumerateAsync(predicate).

In addition to the default built-in JSON plain-text based serializer (which uses the System.Text.Json package), there are other alternative serializers for the document-based repository, including various binary serializers which will instead persist the document as a byte array:

Json.NET Bson MessagePack Protobuf

You can pass the serializer to use to the factory method as follows:

var repo = TableRepository.Create<Product>(...,
    serializer: [JsonDocumentSerializer|BsonDocumentSerializer|MessagePackDocumentSerializer|ProtobufDocumentSerializer].Default);

NOTE: when using alternative serializers, entities might need to be annotated with whatever attributes are required by the underlying libraries.

Attributes

If you want to avoid using strings with the factory methods, you can also annotate the entity type to modify the default values used:

  • [Table("tableName")]: class-level attribute to change the default when no value is provided
  • [PartitionKey]: annotates the property that should be used as the partition key
  • [RowKey]: annotates the property that should be used as the row key.

Values passed to the factory methods override declarative attributes.

For the products example above, your record entity could be:

[Table("Products")]
public record Product([PartitionKey] string Category, [RowKey] string Id) 
{
  public string? Title { get; init; }
  public double Price { get; init; }
}

And creating the repository wouldn't require any arguments besides the storage account:

var repo = TableRepository.Create<Product>(CloudStorageAccount.DevelopmentStorageAccount);

TableEntity Support

Since these repository APIs are quite a bit more intuitive than working directly against a
TableClient, you might want to retrieve/enumerate entities just by their built-in ITableEntity properties, like PartitionKey, RowKey, Timestamp and ETag. For this scenario, we also support creating ITableRepository<TableEntity> and ITablePartition<TableEntity> by using the factory methods TableRepository.Create(...) and TablePartition.Create(...) without a (generic) entity type argument.

For example, given you know all Region entities saved in the example above, use the region Code as the RowKey, you could simply enumerate all regions without using the Region type at all:

var account = CloudStorageAccount.DevelopmentStorageAccount; // or production one
var repo = TablePartition.Create(storageAccount, 
  tableName: "Reference",
  partitionKey: "Region");

// Enumerate all regions within the partition as plain TableEntities
await foreach (TableEntity region in repo.EnumerateAsync())
   Console.WriteLine(region.RowKey);

Installation

> Install-Package Devlooped.TableStorage

All packages also come in source-only versions, if you want to avoid an additional assembly dependency:

> Install-Package Devlooped.TableStorage.Source

The source-only packages includes all types with the default visibility (internal), so you can decide what types to make public by declaring a partial class with the desired visibility. To make them all public, for example, you can include the same Visibility.cs that the compiled version uses, like:

namespace Devlooped

    public partial interface ITableStoragePartition<T> { }
    public partial interface ITableRepository<T> { }
    public partial interface ITableRepository<T> { }
    public partial interface ITablePartition<T> { }
    public partial interface IDocumentRepository<T> { }
    public partial interface IDocumentPartition<T> { }
    public partial interface IDocumentSerializer { }
    public partial interface IBinaryDocumentSerializer { }
    public partial interface IStringDocumentSerializer { }
    public partial interface IDocumentEntity { }

    public partial class TableRepository { }
    public partial class TableRepository<T> { }
    public partial class AttributedTableRepository<T> { }
    public partial class DocumentRepository { }
    public partial class DocumentRepository<T> { }
    public partial class AttributedDocumentRepository<T> { }
    public partial class TablePartition { }
    public partial class TablePartition<T> { }
    public partial class DocumentPartition { }

    public partial class IAsyncEnumerableExtensions { }
    public partial class IQueryableExtensions { }

    // Perhaps make the attributes visible too if you use them?
    public partial class PartitionKeyAttribute { }
    public partial class RowKeyAttribute { }
    public partial class TableAttribute { }
    public partial class TableStorageAttribute { }
}

Dogfooding

CI Version Build

We also produce CI packages from branches and pull requests so you can dogfood builds as quickly as they are produced.

The CI feed is https://pkg.kzu.io/index.json.

The versioning scheme for packages is:

  • PR builds: 42.42.42-pr[NUMBER]
  • Branch builds: 42.42.42-[BRANCH].[COMMITS]

Sponsors

sponsored clariusclarius

get mentioned here too!

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.NET Core netcoreapp2.0 was computed.  netcoreapp2.1 was computed.  netcoreapp2.2 was computed.  netcoreapp3.0 was computed.  netcoreapp3.1 was computed. 
.NET Standard netstandard2.0 is compatible.  netstandard2.1 is compatible. 
.NET Framework 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. 
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Tizen tizen40 was computed.  tizen60 was computed. 
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NuGet packages (4)

Showing the top 4 NuGet packages that depend on Devlooped.TableStorage.Source:

Package Downloads
Devlooped.TableStorage.Protobuf.Source

A source-only Protocol Buffers binary serializer for use with document-based repositories. > This project uses SponsorLink and may issue IDE-only warnings if no active sponsorship is detected. > Learn more at https://github.com/devlooped#sponsorlink.

Devlooped.TableStorage.Bson.Source

A source-only BSON binary serializer for use with document-based repositories. > This project uses SponsorLink and may issue IDE-only warnings if no active sponsorship is detected. > Learn more at https://github.com/devlooped#sponsorlink.

Devlooped.TableStorage.MessagePack.Source

A source-only MessagePack binary serializer for use with document-based repositories. > This project uses SponsorLink and may issue IDE-only warnings if no active sponsorship is detected. > Learn more at https://github.com/devlooped#sponsorlink.

Devlooped.TableStorage.Newtonsoft.Source

A source-only Newtonsoft.Json-based serializer for use with document-based repositories. > This project uses SponsorLink and may issue IDE-only warnings if no active sponsorship is detected. > Learn more at https://github.com/devlooped#sponsorlink.

GitHub repositories

This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.

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