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Transcript
NHibernate Object/Relational Persistence for .NET A little bit of background information… .NET port of the Hibernate project (Java) Mature architecture and proven concepts, already in use in many enterprise Java applications Already quite popular in the .NET world as well Popularity seems to be increasing :) General Philosophy Of NHibernate It’s all about POCO Should work on most databases As few constraints on your code as possible Full OO support: inheritance, polymorphism, composition, single-valued and many-valued associations Maximize performance and flexibility Keep your code clean Strong Points Ideally suited for OLTP scenarios (web applications, service layers, …) Database independence Rich feature set Mature Extensible architecture Large, active, helpful and growing user base Plenty of articles, blog posts and documentation available It’s Open Source (LGPL)! Weak Points Not suited (at all) for bulk data processing No code generation, and no designer support either Bad reputation in some companies due to lazy coding ( = abuse of lazy loading ) Plenty of outdated articles, blog posts and documentation available It’s Open Source! (some companies just don’t like that) Let’s look at some of the things we can do with NHibernate… Transitive Persistence Managing associations between classes in a transparent manner Allows you to persist object graphs with one instruction Needs to be configured for each association => fine-grained control over cascade settings Hold on… why was every member in the Order class virtual? I wouldn’t want to debug that either :) Storing data in the database in an easy manner is great and all, but what about getting it out again? Querying with NHibernate Hibernate Query Language It’s an Object Oriented query language Criteria API Makes it easier to compose queries dynamically from code. LINQ… still not fully supported Wouldn’t it be great if we could execute multiple queries in only one database roundtrip? Future Queries Can we efficiently update multiple records in one roundtrip as well? As of NHibernate 2.1, we can do this with some new HQL statements Data Modification With HQL What about caching? Do we need to do that manually? Of course not :) Second Level Cache Second Level Cache data is available to all sessions We can cache entity instances… But we can also cache the results of queries… This is ideal for static (reference) data or even data that doesn’t change frequently How does the cache deal with modified data, though? We’ll update the database and the cache NHibernate will never cache anything in the Second Level Cache automatically It needs to be configured on a per-entity and per-query basis All the caching power you want, without having to pollute your code Only use this for data that doesn’t change frequently though But where is the cache’s data stored? That’s up to you… multiple providers are available: ASP.NET cache, MemCached, Velocity, Prevalence, … At this point, I’m almost running out of time and there is a lot more interesting stuff that we won’t get to cover. Like optimistic concurrency strategies… Or pessimistic locking strategies… Or the various identifier strategies… Or the various inheritance strategies… Or how automatic dirty tracking works… Or how you can implement your own dirty tracking… Or custom user types… Or how to deal with entities that were detached from the session… Or the generation of DDL scripts, for your specific database… Or the various mapping strategies for complex domain models… We didn’t cover any of the many extensibility points either… Maybe some other time :) If you want to learn more, be sure to visit http://nhforge.org Oh, and check out my blog if you liked this presentation: http://davybrion.com Questions?