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Step 3 Uno

Daniel J. Summers edited this page Oct 18, 2016 · 3 revisions

Uno - Step 3

Our implementation here will fall into two broad categories - defining the configurable connection and table/index checking code that we can run at startup, and configuring ASP.NET Core's DI container to wire it all up. Before we get to that, though, we need to add a few packages to project.json (under dependencies) for this step.

"Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.FileExtensions": "1.0.0",
"Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.Json": "1.0.0",
"Microsoft.Extensions.Options.ConfigurationExtensions": "1.0.0",
"RethinkDb.Driver": "2.3.15"

Configurable Connection

Our application will need an instance of RethinkDB's IConnection to utilize. To support our configuration options, we will make a POCO called DataConfig, under a new Data directory in our project, and also give it an instance method to create the connection with the current values.

namespace Uno.Data
{
    using RethinkDb.Driver;
    using RethinkDb.Driver.Net;
    
    public class DataConfig
    {
        public string Hostname { get; set; }
        
        public int Port { get; set; }
        
        public string AuthKey { get; set; }
        
        public int Timeout { get; set; }
        
        public string Database { get; set; }
        
        public IConnection CreateConnection()
        {
            var conn = RethinkDB.R.Connection();
            
            if (null != Hostname) { conn = conn.Hostname(Hostname); }
            if (0 != Port) { conn = conn.Port(Port); }
            if (null != AuthKey) { conn = conn.AuthKey(AuthKey); }
            if (null != Database) { conn = conn.Db(Database); }
            if (0 != Timeout) { conn = conn.Timeout(Timeout); }
            
            return conn.Connect();
        }
    }
}

Note that the connection builder uses a fluent interface. We just as well could have chained all of these together, using defaults where we had no data, like so:

RethinkDB.R.Connection()
    .Hostname(null == Hostname ? RethinkDBConstants.DefaultHostname : Hostname)
    .Port(0 == Port ? RethinkDBConstants.DefaultPort : Port)
    ...etc...
    .Connect();

We could then actually define this as a fat-arrow (=>) function and omit the return. If C# were our final destination, that's a fine implementation; of course, it's not, and I've structured it this way to illustrate that we really only have to call the configuration methods for properties that we've specified in our JSON file.

Note also that we are mutating the conn variable with the result of each builder call. Do we need to do this? I have no idea; if the C# driver is (under the hood) mutating itself, we don't; if it's returning a new version of the builder with a change made (the F#/immutable way of doing things), we do. I certainly could find out (yay, open source!), but it's an implementation detail we don't need to know. It's not wrong to do it this way, and in future implementations, we will be accomplishing the same thing without using mutation - at least in our code.

Tables

RethinkDB uses the term "table" to represent a collection of documents. Other document databases use the term "collection" or "document store"; this is the rough equivalent of a relational table. Of course, the difference here is that the documents do not all have to conform to the same schema. Data/Table.cs contains C# constants we will use to reference our tables.

Ensuring Tables and Indexes Exist

Many of the new APIs that are provided within .NET Core are implemented as extension methods on existing objects. Since IConnection represents our connection to RethinkDB, we'll target that type for our extension methods. We create the EnvironmentExtensions.cs file under the Data directory, and define it as a public static class.

In our overall plan for step 3, we defined several types of queries we want to be able to run against these tables. While RethinkDB will create a table the first time you try to store a document in it, we cannot define indexes against them. Indexes are the way RethinkDB avoids a complete table scan for documents; the concept is very similar to an index on a relational table. Since we need to define these indexes before our application can use them, we'll need make sure the tables exist, so we can create indexes against them.

We will not go line-by-line through EnvironmentExtensions.cs; it's rather straightforward, and simply ensures that the database, tables, and indexes exist. It is our first exposure to the RethinkDB API, though, so be sure to review the source to ensure you get a sense of how data access is designed to work in the RethinkDB driver.

Dependency Injection

Now that we have defined our connection, and a method to make sure we have the data environment we need, we need a connection. appsettings.json is the standard .NET Core name for the configuration file, so we create one with the following values:

{
  "RethinkDB": {
    "Hostname": "my-rethinkdb-server",
    "Database": "O2F1"
  }
}

The database name, here O2F1, will be different in each of our examples; this way, we can verify that each of our instances created the tables and indexes correctly.

When we were doing our quick-and-dirty "Hello World" in step 1, we had very minimal content in Startup.cs. Now, we'll flesh that out a little more.

[add]
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting;
using Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration;
using Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection;
using Microsoft.Extensions.Options;
using Uno.Data;
[/add]

public class Startup
{
    public static IConfigurationRoot Configuration { get; private set; }
    
    public Startup(IHostingEnvironment env)
    {
        var builder = new ConfigurationBuilder()
            .SetBasePath(env.ContentRootPath)
            .AddJsonFile("appsettings.json", optional: true, reloadOnChange: true)
            .AddJsonFile($"appsettings.{env.EnvironmentName}.json", optional: true)
            .AddEnvironmentVariables();
        Configuration = builder.Build();
    }
    
    public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
    {
        services.AddOptions();
        services.Configure<DataConfig>(Configuration.GetSection("RethinkDB"));
        
        var cfg = services.BuildServiceProvider().GetService<IOptions<DataConfig>>().Value;
        var conn = cfg.CreateConnection();
        conn.EstablishEnvironment(cfg.Database).GetAwaiter().GetResult();
        services.AddSingleton(conn);
    }

This does the following:

  • Creates a configuration tree that is a union of appsettings.json, appsettings.{environment}.json, and environment variables (each of those overriding the prior one if settings are specified in both)
  • Establishes the new Options API, registers our DataConfig as an option set, and specifies that it should be obtained from the RethinkDB section of the configuration
  • Creates a connection based on our configuration
  • Runs the EstablishEnvironment extension method, so that when we're done, we have the tables and indexes we expect (since it's an async method, we use the .GetAwaiter().GetResult() chain so we don't have to define ConfigureServices as async)
  • Registers our IConnection for injection

Now, if we build and run our application, then use RethinkDB's administration site to look at our server, we should now see an O2F1 database created, along with our tables and indexes.

Back to Step 3

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