Convert an ASP.NET Core Web Application project to use PostgreSQL with Entity Framework.
This enables development of ASP.NET Core projects using VS Code on macOS or linux targets.
This project uses .NET 7.0 target framework, ASP.NET Core Web Application MVC project scaffold from Visual Studio 2022 (version 17.4).
Project setup has already been completed in this repository - assure environment setup; then, jump to running the solution.
This project requires PostgreSQL - installation instructions are provided below.
If using Visual Studio Code, you will need to generate ASP.NET Core developer certificates by issuing the following commands from a terminal:
dotnet dev-certs https --clean
dotnet dev-certs https
For command line database ef
commands, you will need to install Entity Framework Core tools .NET CLI:
dotnet tool install --global dotnet-ef
Below, instructions are referenced to use PostgreSQL in a ASP.NET Core project.
Install the Npgsql.EntityFrameworkCore.PostgreSQL
NuGet package in the ASP.NET web application.
To do this, you can use the dotnet
command line by executing:
$ dotnet add package Npgsql.EntityFrameworkCore.PostgreSQL --version 3.1.2
Or, edit the project's .csproj file and add the following line in the PackageReference
item group:
<PackageReference Include="Npgsql.EntityFrameworkCore.PostgreSQL" Version="3.1.2" />
Configure connection string in project's appsettings.json, replacing the username
, password
, and dbname
appropriately:
"ConnectionStrings": {
"DefaultConnection": "User ID=username;Password=password;Server=localhost;Port=5432;Database=dbname;Integrated Security=true;Pooling=true;"
},
Inside Program.cs replace the UseSqlServer
options with UseNpgsql
:
builder.Services.AddDbContext<ApplicationDbContext>(options =>
options.UseNpgsql(connectionString));
Before the solution can be executed, be sure to run entity framework migrations.
Initial migrations may fail, due to ASP.NET Core template come with a pre-generation migration for SQL Server.
When trying to run the migration, you might see errors such as:
Npgsql.PostgresException (0x80004005): 42704: type "nvarchar" does not exist
System.NullReferenceException: Object reference not set to an instance of an object.
System.InvalidOperationException: No mapping to a relational type can be found for property 'Microsoft.AspNetCore.Identity.IdentityUser.TwoFactorEnabled' with the CLR type 'bool'.
Delete the entire Migrations folder, and regenerate new inital migrations.
Generate a new migration using Visual Studio Package Manager Console (from menu: Tools -> NuGet Package Manager -> Package Manager Console):
PM> Add-Migration
Or, from the command line via DotNet CLI:
$ dotnet ef migrations add Initial
If dotnet migration tools don't exist, remember to install the tools using the instruction above in the environment setup.
Execute the migration using either Visual Studio Package Manager Console (from menu: Tools -> NuGet Package Manager -> Package Manager Console):
PM> Update-Database
Or, from the command line via DotNet CLI, execute the following command inside the project directory, where the .csproj file is located:
$ dotnet ef database update
After running the migration, the database is created and web application is ready to be run.
Here are instructions to setup a PostgreSQL server on Mac using Homebrew.
Use brew to install PostgreSQL, then launch the service:
$ brew install postgresql
$ brew services start postgresql
Create a user using the createuser
command from a terminal, where username
is your desired new user name. Using the -P
argument, you will be prompted to setup a password.
$ createuser username -P
Create your database using the createdb
command from a terminal, where dbname
is your desired new database name.
$ createdb dbname
At this time, run the solution's Entity Framework migrations (see above for instructions).
Launch PostgreSQL interactive terminal and connect to the database.
$ psql dbname
From the PostgreSQL interface terminal, List tables using the \dt
command:
dbname=# \dt
List of relations
Schema | Name | Type | Owner
--------+-----------------------+-------+--------------
public | AspNetRoleClaims | table | username
public | AspNetRoles | table | username
public | AspNetUserClaims | table | username
public | AspNetUserLogins | table | username
public | AspNetUserRoles | table | username
public | AspNetUserTokens | table | username
public | AspNetUsers | table | username
public | __EFMigrationsHistory | table | username
(8 rows)
If permissions were not setup properly during the creation of the database, retroactively fix by granting privileges where dbname
is your database name and username
is the user you created:
$ psql dbname
dbname=# GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA public TO username;