The latest ADO.NET evolution focuses on raising the level of abstraction from the logical (relational) level to the conceptual (entity) level. For this purpose Microsoft introduces the Entity Framework, designed to simplify data - object conversion and embed data access queries into program code.
dotConnect for MySQL fully supports ADO.NET Entity Framework, including Entity Framework Core.
The article consists of the following sections:
The Entity Framework is a set of technologies in ADO.NET that support development of data-oriented software applications. The Entity Framework is designed to enable developers to create data access applications by programming against a conceptual application model instead of programming directly against a relational storage schema. The goal is to decrease the amount of code and maintenance required for data-oriented applications. Entity Framework applications provide the following benefits:
dotConnect for MySQL allows using it in Entity Framework models in various ways. You can use our provider with standard Visual Studio Entity Framework tools, in the same way as SqlClient.
For example, you can create an Entity Framework model, using database-first approach (for Entity Framework v1 - v6) in the following way:
dotConnect for MySQL also provides advanced ORM designer and code generation tool - Entity Developer. It allows creating Entity Framework v1 and Entity Framework Core models using database-first, model-first, or mixed approaches and generating code for them.
For your convenience there is a brief Entity Framework Tutorial that you can use to get acquainted with the technology. You can also take a look at Entity Framework samples available with the product, or download separate Entity Framework Query Samples package. The latter is a standard Microsoft demo with added MySQL connectivity.
dotConnect for MySQL also supports Visual Studio LightSwitch, so you can develop LightSwitch applications with our provider. You can find a tutorial on creating a simple LightSwitch application using dotConnect for MySQL here: Tutorial: How to Connect Visual Studio LightSwitch to MySQL with dotConnect for MySQL Data Provider.
Since there are no global Entity Framework provider registration for Entity Framework v6, you should register our provider manually in the config file of your project. For this you should add the following line:
<provider invariantName="Devart.Data.MySql" type="Devart.Data.MySql.Entity.MySqlEntityProviderServices, Devart.Data.MySql.Entity.EF6, Version=8.3.215.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=09af7300eec23701" />
to the entityFramework -> providers section.
<entityFramework> <providers> <provider invariantName="Devart.Data.MySql" type="Devart.Data.MySql.Entity.MySqlEntityProviderServices, Devart.Data.MySql.Entity.EF6, Version=8.3.215.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=09af7300eec23701" /> </providers> </entityFramework>
Note: replace 8.3.215.0 with the actual assembly version.
If it suits for your project, you may omit the exact assembly version:
<entityFramework> <providers> <provider invariantName="Devart.Data.MySql" type="Devart.Data.MySql.Entity.MySqlEntityProviderServices, Devart.Data.MySql.Entity.EF6" /> </providers> </entityFramework>
This section appears in the project config file only after you add the NuGet EntityFramework package either explicitly, by executing the "install-package EntityFramework" command, or implicitly, by adding an Entity Framework v6 model for SQL Server via EDM Wizard.
dotConnect for MySQL fully supports Entity Framework 6.4 on .NET Core 3 (and on Full .NET Framework).
For Entity Framework 6.4, an Entity Framework provider cannot be registered in the config file of your project. You need to use any of the following two code-based approaches:
The first approach is to use the DbConfigurationType attribute. It suits only for DbContext. Here is an example:
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[DbConfigurationType(typeof(Devart.Data.MySql.Entity.MySqlEntityProviderServicesConfiguration))] public class MyContext : DbContext { // ... } |
The second way is to use the static SetConfiguration method of the DbConfiguration class. It can be used both with DbContext and ObjectContext. Here is an example:
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public class MyContext: ObjectContext { static MyContext() { DbConfiguration.SetConfiguration(new Devart.Data.MySql.Entity.MySqlEntityProviderServicesConfiguration()); } // ... } |
Both of the above examples use the MySqlEntityProviderServicesConfiguration class that suites for most users. If Entity Framework 6.4 provider configuration must be customized, you will need to create a descendant of the DbConfiguration class and set values for SetProviderFactory() and SetProviderServices() in it. Then use this custom class for provider registration. Here is an example:
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public class MySqlConfiguration: DbConfiguration { public MySqlConfiguration() { SetProviderFactory("Devart.Data.MySql", Devart.Data.MySql.MySqlProviderFactory.Instance); SetProviderServices("Devart.Data.MySql", Devart.Data.MySql.Entity.MySqlEntityProviderServices.Instance); } } |
dotConnect for MySQL currently supports Entity Framework Core. Entity Framework Core is supported for the Full .NET Framework platform of version 4.5.1 and higher and for .NET Core. Dynamic database object creation (tables/FK/PK/indexes/triggers/sequences) based on an Entity Framework model is supported. See our Entity Framework Core Code-First Tutorial for Full .NET Framework and for .NET Core.
Database-First via Package Manager Console and the Scaffold-DbContext command is supported. See our Entity Framework Core Database-First Tutorial for Full .NET Framework and for .NET Core.
Please note that only a part of Entity Framework provider configuration settings is supported for Entity Framework Core. Also, not all Entity Framework v6 features are supported because Entity Framework Core does not support a lot of Entity Framework v6 features itself.
In order to use Entity Framework Core for Full .NET Framework, you need Visual Studio 2013 or higher. For .NET Core you need Visual Studio 2017 or higher.
In order to register an Entity Framework provider and set a connection string, you need to override the OnConfiguring method of your DbContext class descendant.
The mapping supported by Entity Framework Core is described in details in the corresponding section of Entity Framework documentation. If you plan to support several data sources for one base Entity Framework model, that is mapped to tables and columns named differently in different data sources, you can use special provider-specific extension methods in fluent mapping in order to support specific mapping for each data source simultaneously. dotConnect for MySQL provides the following extension methods:
When deploying Entity Framework projects, it is necessary to:
<system.data> <DbProviderFactories> <remove invariant="Devart.Data.MySql" /> <add name="dotConnect for MySQL" invariant="Devart.Data.MySql" description="Devart dotConnect for MySQL" type="Devart.Data.MySql.MySqlProviderFactory, Devart.Data.MySql, Version=8.3.215.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=09af7300eec23701" /> </DbProviderFactories> </system.data>
Replace 8.3.215.0 here with your actual version.
You can find the necessary assemblies in the Entity folder in the provider installation folder, in the subfolder, corresponding to the Entity Framework version necessary.
If you are registering the provider in the machine.config file, please take into account the Entity Framework version. Entity Framework v1 - specific applications require an entry in the .NET Framework 2.0 configuration file, and Entity Framework v4 and later - specific applications should be registered in the .NET Framework 4.0 configuration file. For Entity Framework Core there is no need to register the provider in the machine.config file.
You can also read Micrsoft's Deployment Considerations on ADO.NET Entity Framework.
dotConnect for MySQL is compatible with the latest version of ADO.NET Entity Framework and Visual Studio. The following MySQL version is required for Entity Framework to function properly: 5.0 or higher (both MySQL and MariaDB).
To migrate your ADO.NET Entity Data Model to Devart Entity Model, change the extension of the model file to edml (edmx -> edml), set the Build Action property of your model to "DevartEntityDeploy", and Custom Tool to "DevartEfGenerator". After that the model can be edited with the Devart Entity Developer.
To migrate your Devart Entity Model to ADO.NET Entity Data Model, change the model file extension (edml -> edmx), set the Build Action property of your model to "EntityDeploy", and Custom Tool to "EntityModelCodeGenerator". After that the model can be edited with Entity Designer.
Both *.edml and *.edmx can be opened and edited manually using XML Editor.
Entity Framework Tutorial | Devart LinqConnect | http://blog.devart.com/tag/entity-framework