Marten
MySqlConnector
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Marten | MySqlConnector | |
---|---|---|
23 | 8 | |
2,662 | 1,352 | |
2.1% | 1.3% | |
9.8 | 9.2 | |
3 days ago | 4 days ago | |
C# | C# | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Marten
- Marten – .NET Transactional Document DB and Event Store on PostgreSQL
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Dapper vs. Entity Framework With Postgres
Id recommend trying out MartenDb. It's not really a PostgreSQL ORM, it actually uses Postgres more as a document database via jsonb. But it's excruciatingly easy to use and schema updates are a breeze (and largely automatic)
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Show HN: Light implementation of Event Sourcing using PostgreSQL as event store
Check out Marten for a fully fleshed out implementation https://github.com/JasperFx/marten
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Is anyone using Dapr
We are using ExtCore here to make our app modular: https://extcore.net/, and MartenDB for event store (which is surprisingly VERY simple) : https://martendb.io/
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Yet another embedded DB (kind of)
I always loved Marten, it is so simple to use and yet powerful. If you are unfamiliar with it, it is a data access library (like an ORM) that is using JSON serialization and LINQ to store and query data from/to Postgres. It basically turns Postgres into document DB. Comparing it to EF, Marten doesn't require migrations since it stores documents.
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This article is covering the potential problems you will face when using MongoDB for typical relational tasks.
You're better off using Postgres (has JSON columns.) If you want a more "document" oriented experience, use Marten: https://martendb.io/
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Self-Paced Kit: Introduction to Event Sourcing with Node.js and TypeScript
For that part, the samples use EventStoreDB (https://www.eventstore.com/), which is the only mature event store I know in Node.js land. Event Sourcing allows using any database as backing storage. I'm co-maintainer of the Marten (https://martendb.io/), which is a .NET library that allows using Postgres as event store and document db.
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CQRS is simpler than you think with C#11 and .NET 7!
Then you should check out Marten (https://martendb.io/). Our intention is to remove the boilerplate, we're using Postgres e having the built-in projections.
- Event-driven projections in Marten explained
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Marten, a Crystal web framework that makes building web apps productive and fun
Not to be confused with the C# document database built on Postgres.
https://martendb.io/
MySqlConnector
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Faster MySQL with HTTP/3
MySqlConnector (the most popular .NET library for MySQL, and the one that I authored) has supported protocol compression for many years: https://github.com/mysql-net/MySqlConnector/issues/31.
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Implementing the MySQL server protocol for fun and profit
> I kept technical notes about the protocol, to serve as a future reference for myself and for other developers.
As someone who's written a MySQL client (in C#: https://github.com/mysql-net/MySqlConnector), I'd be very interested to see your notes. Are they available anywhere, or were they the confidential IP of your client?
> Unsurprisingly, bugs were uncovered every time a new client was added.
I've faced the same thing, from a client perspective. Every time a new server is tested (MySQL, MariaDB, Amazon Aurora, Azure Database for MySQL, etc.), I find slightly different interpretations of the protocol and have to accommodate them.
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Ask HN: Examples of Top C# Code?
I have had the pleasure of contributing to a couple different networked drivers with very talented maintainers that I like to use as references.
One supports a wide array of Framework versions and has both Sync and Async I/O, as it must to implement the ADO.NET database driver interfaces. Reading the internals really highlight the way that .NET has evolved over the years and what must be done in each target version to maximize performance:
https://github.com/mysql-net/MySqlConnector
The other supports .NET 6 only with Async I/O only. This support policy seems to be the way that "modern" .NET development is headed, as .NET 6 will be the floor for LTS .NET (formerly .NET Core) releases in a few months. Async APIs only greatly simplify development, and make it simpler to remain performant when targeting WASM.
https://github.com/Cysharp/AlterNats
As a library maintainer, one thing I often wonder about is how to indicate .NET version support. One option would be for the major version of the library to track the major version of .NET, so if I were to publish a new library today then start with .NET 6 support and start with version number 6.0.0 instead of 1.0.0. This would limit the library to only making breaking changes when the .NET version changes though.
- Do I need to worry about connection pooling/etc with MySql.Data.MySqlClient?
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Need some help/direction reading CSV into MySQL without duplication
Use the MySqlConnector to load the data into a temp table using the bulk copy API. Both of my libraries implement the IDataReader (DbDataReader) interface, so they can be directly used with the bulk copy APIs. Then insert into the final table from the temp table filtering out rows that are already in the final table.
- Finding an Authorization Bypass on My Own Website
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Performance Improvements in .NET 6
I'm the author of what you might call the "new" MySQL ADO.NET library: https://github.com/mysql-net/MySqlConnector
I agree with your impression that developers of the other library don't seem to be "plugged in to" the .NET ecosystem. As an independent developer (not affiliated with Oracle or Microsoft), I've been able to influence GitHub PRs that shape the ADO.NET API for .NET 6.0, just by showing up and contributing; I haven't seen anyone from the Oracle MySQL team participating. Meanwhile, they violate basic principles of the .NET Framework Design Guidelines that have been around for over a decade (https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/standard/design-guid...), which makes their library feel alien to a .NET programmer (regardless of the quality issues it might have).
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MongoDB C# Driver Vs. MongoDB.Entities Benchmark
e.g. this community effort of a MySQL ADO.NET provider is miles ahead of Oracle's driver.
What are some alternatives?
Event Store - EventStoreDB, the event-native database. Designed for Event Sourcing, Event-Driven, and Microservices architectures
Pomelo.EntityFrameworkCore.MySql - Entity Framework Core provider for MySQL and MariaDB built on top of MySqlConnector
MongoDB - The MongoDB Database
Avalonia.FuncUI - Develop cross-plattform GUI Applications using F# and Avalonia!
RavenDB - ACID Document Database
openiddict-core - Flexible and versatile OAuth 2.0/OpenID Connect stack for .NET
Yessql - A .NET document database working on any RDBMS
Hot Chocolate - Welcome to the home of the Hot Chocolate GraphQL server for .NET, the Strawberry Shake GraphQL client for .NET and Banana Cake Pop the awesome Monaco based GraphQL IDE.
efcore.pg - Entity Framework Core provider for PostgreSQL
aqtinstall - aqt: Another (unofficial) Qt CLI Installer on multi-platforms
LiteDB - LiteDB - A .NET NoSQL Document Store in a single data file
IdentityServer - The most flexible and standards-compliant OpenID Connect and OAuth 2.x framework for ASP.NET Core