Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore 3.1.1

dotnet add package Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore --version 3.1.1
                    
NuGet\Install-Package Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore -Version 3.1.1
                    
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="Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore" Version="3.1.1" />
                    
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
<PackageVersion Include="Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore" Version="3.1.1" />
                    
Directory.Packages.props
<PackageReference Include="Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore" />
                    
Project file
For projects that support Central Package Management (CPM), copy this XML node into the solution Directory.Packages.props file to version the package.
paket add Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore --version 3.1.1
                    
#r "nuget: Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore, 3.1.1"
                    
#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.
#:package Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore@3.1.1
                    
#:package directive can be used in C# file-based apps starting in .NET 10 preview 4. Copy this into a .cs file before any lines of code to reference the package.
#addin nuget:?package=Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore&version=3.1.1
                    
Install as a Cake Addin
#tool nuget:?package=Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore&version=3.1.1
                    
Install as a Cake Tool

Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore

License: FSL-1.1-MIT (Functional Source License — source-available; converts to MIT after 2 years). Not OSI-approved OSS.

EF Core persistence for the Stratara event-sourced stack — PostgreSQL flavoured via Npgsql + pgvector. Bundles four previously-separate Stratara projects into one NuGet because they always ship together:

Folder Contents Old csproj
EntityFrameworkCore/ shared EF conventions, value generators, IDbContext / IReadDbContext / IWriteDbContext / ITenantScopedDbContext / IIdentityDbContext, UnitOfWork base, DefaultDbResolver, NpgsqlDbContextServiceCollectionExtensions, DbContextMigrationUtility Stratara.EntityFrameworkCore
WriteStore/ WriteDbContext, WriteUnitOfWork, event-stream/snapshot/event-chain/command-audit/outbox repositories + entity configurations Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore.WriteStore
ReadStore/ ReadDbContext, ReadUnitOfWork, ProjectionsUnitOfWork, Tenant repository, projection entity configurations Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore.ReadStore
IdentityStore/ Generic ASP.NET Identity IdentityDbContext + marker Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore.IdentityStore

Namespaces are unchanged from the pre-fold layout (Stratara.EntityFrameworkCore, Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore.WriteStore, Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore.ReadStore, Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore.IdentityStore) so consumer using directives don't change.

Why folded

WriteStore-without-ReadStore is not a real use case. EF conventions + value generators + UnitOfWork primitives are foundational for every other store. ASP.NET Identity glue follows the same EF Core conventions. Splitting into 4 NuGets that always ship together adds version-management noise (4× <PackageVersion> to keep in sync, transitive-resolution risk) without any consumer benefit.

If your application doesn't use ASP.NET Identity, simply don't reference IdentityDbContext-derived types — the rest of the package works without them.

Quick start

// In your AppHost / Worker / Web project:
builder.Services.AddNpgsqlWriteStore<MyAppWriteDbContext>(builder.Configuration);
builder.Services.AddNpgsqlReadStore<MyAppReadDbContext>(builder.Configuration);

Then derive MyAppWriteDbContext : Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore.WriteStore.WriteDbContext and MyAppReadDbContext : Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore.ReadStore.ReadDbContext.

Dependencies

  • Stratara.Projections — for projection types used by ProjectionsUnitOfWork.
  • Stratara.Shared — for diagnostics + abstractions + resilience.
  • Npgsql.EntityFrameworkCore.PostgreSQL, EFCore.NamingConventions, Microsoft.AspNetCore.Identity.EntityFrameworkCore, Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore, Pgvector.EntityFrameworkCore.
Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net10.0 is compatible.  net10.0-android was computed.  net10.0-browser was computed.  net10.0-ios was computed.  net10.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net10.0-macos was computed.  net10.0-tvos was computed.  net10.0-windows was computed. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.

NuGet packages (2)

Showing the top 2 NuGet packages that depend on Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore:

Package Downloads
Stratara.Infrastructure

Infrastructure glue for the Stratara framework — authorization decorators, configuration providers, and DI composition helpers that wire Mediator, Outbox, Identity, and EF Core into a hosted app.

Stratara.EventSourcing.WorkerDefaults

Worker-host wiring composites for the Stratara event-sourced stack. IHostApplicationBuilder extensions (AddBackendServices, AddCommandWorkerServices, AddEventProjectionWorkerServices, AddSagaWorkerServices, AddOutboxWorkerServices) bundle the per-concern DI calls so each worker host opts in with one line.

GitHub repositories

This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.

Version Downloads Last Updated
3.1.1 44 6/1/2026
3.1.0 58 5/30/2026
3.0.23 67 5/28/2026

### Fixed

- **`FileMasterKeyProvider` now rejects a master KEK that is not exactly 32 bytes at startup.**
 The KEK is used directly as an AES-256-GCM key, which accepts only 16/24/32-byte keys. The
 provider previously required merely *at least* 32 bytes, so a longer KEK (for example the
 48-byte output of `openssl rand -base64 48`, a common HKDF master-key recipe) passed both
 construction and the eager `FileKeyStoreStartupProbe`, then threw
 `CryptographicException: Specified key is not a valid size for this algorithm` on the **first**
 key creation at runtime — defeating the purpose of the boot-time probe. The provider now
 validates the decoded length is exactly 32 bytes and fails fast at boot with an actionable
 message (`Generate one with: openssl rand -base64 32`). A 32-byte KEK is unaffected.
- **`EnvelopeFileKeyStore` is now safe for multiple processes sharing one store file** (for
 example several containers bind-mounting the same host directory). Previously a process only
 read the store once at construction, so a data-encryption key created by another process after
 startup was invisible (`GetDataEncryptionKeyAsync` returned `null`, breaking decryption), and
 two processes creating keys concurrently could overwrite each other's keys or mint colliding
 versions for the same scope. Reads now reload from disk on a cache miss (guarded by the file's
 last-write time to avoid reload storms), and every mutation serializes through an exclusive
 cross-process lock file and re-reads the latest on-disk state before writing. A networked file
 system (NFS/SMB) remains unsupported — it guarantees neither atomic rename nor reliable advisory
 locks.

### Added

- **`LogEvents.KeyManagement.KeyStoreReloaded` (112_006)** — debug-level event emitted when the
 file key store reloads its state from disk to pick up keys written by another process.