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Wraps the .NET SDK for Azure Cosmos DB abstracting away the complexity, exposing a simple CRUD-based repository pattern

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Azure Cosmos DB Repository .NET SDK

This package wraps the NuGet: Microsoft.Azure.Cosmos package, exposing a simple dependency-injection enabled IRepository<T> interface.

Cosmos Repository

The repository is responsible for all of the create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations on objects where T : Item. The Item type adds several properties, one which is a globally unique identifier defined as:

[JsonProperty("id")]
public string Id { get; set; } = Guid.NewGuid().ToString();

Additionally, a type property exists which indicates the subclass name (this is used for filtering implicitly on your behalf):

[JsonProperty("type")]
public string Type { get; set; }

Finally, a partition key property is used internally to manage partitioning on your behalf. This can optionally be overridden on an item per item basis.

πŸ“£ Azure Cosmos DB - Official Blog

Getting started

  1. Create an Azure Cosmos DB SQL resource.

  2. Obtain the resource connection string from the Keys blade, be sure to get a connection string and not the key - these are different. The connection string is a compound key and endpoint URL.

  3. Call AddCosmosRepository:

    public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
    {
        services.AddCosmosRepository();
    }

    The optional setupAction allows consumers to manually configure the RepositoryOptions object:

    public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
    {
        services.AddCosmosRepository(
            options =>
            {
                options.CosmosConnectionString = "< connection string >";
                options.ContainerId = "data-store";
                options.DatabaseId = "samples";
            });
    }
  4. Define your object graph, objects must inherit Item, for example:

    using Microsoft.Azure.CosmosRepository;
    
    public class Person : Item
    {
        public string FirstName { get; set; }
        public string LastName { get; set; }
    }
  5. Ask for an instance of IRepository<TItem>, in this case the TItem is Person:

    using Microsoft.Azure.CosmosRepository;
    
    public class Consumer
    {
        readonly IRepository<Person> _repository;
    
        public Consumer(IRepository<Person> repository) =>
            _repository = repository;
    
        // Use the repo...
    }
  6. Perform any of the operations on the _repository instance, create Person records, update them, read them, or delete.

  7. Enjoy!

Configuration

When OptimizeBandwidth is true (its default value), the repository SDK reduces networking and CPU load by not sending the resource back over the network and serializing it to the client. This is specific to writes, such as create, update, and delete. For more information, see Optimizing bandwidth in the Azure Cosmos DB .NET SDK.

There is much debate with how to structure your database and corresponding containers. Many developers with relational database design experience might prefer to have a single container per item type, while others understand that Azure Cosmos DB will handle things correctly regardless. By default, the ContainerPerItemType option is false and all items are persisted into the same container. However, when it is true, each distinct subclass of Item gets its own container named by the class itself.

Well-known keys

Depending on the .NET configuration provider your app is using, there are several well-known keys that map to the repository options that configure your usage of the repository SDK. When using environment variables, such as those in Azure App Service configuration or Azure Key Vault secrets, the following keys map to the RepositoryOptions instance:

Key Data type Default value
RepositoryOptions__CosmosConnectionString string null
RepositoryOptions__DatabaseId string "database"
RepositoryOptions__ContainerId string "container"
RepositoryOptions__OptimizeBandwidth boolean true
RepositoryOptions__ContainerPerItemType boolean false
RepositoryOptions__AllowBulkExecution boolean false

Example appsettings.json

{
  "Logging": {
    "LogLevel": {
      "Default": "Information",
      "Microsoft": "Warning",
      "Microsoft.Hosting.Lifetime": "Information"
    }
  },
  "AllowedHosts": "*",
  "RepositoryOptions": {
    "CosmosConnectionString": "<Your-CosmosDB-ConnectionString>",
    "DatabaseId": "<Your-CosmosDB-DatabaseName>",
    "ContainerId": "<Your-CosmosDB-ContainerName>",
    "OptimizeBandwidth": true,
    "ContainerPerItemType": true,
    "AllowBulkExecution": true
  }
}

For more information, see JSON configuration provider.

Example appsettings.json with Azure Functions

{
  "Logging": {
    "LogLevel": {
      "Default": "Information",
      "Microsoft": "Warning",
      "Microsoft.Hosting.Lifetime": "Information"
    }
  },
  "AllowedHosts": "*",
  "Values": {
    "RepositoryOptions:CosmosConnectionString": "<Your-CosmosDB-ConnectionString>",
    "RepositoryOptions:DatabaseId": "<Your-CosmosDB-DatabaseName>",
    "RepositoryOptions:ContainerId": "<Your-CosmosDB-ContainerName>",
    "RepositoryOptions:OptimizeBandwidth": true,
    "RepositoryOptions:ContainerPerItemType": true,
    "RepositoryOptions:AllowBulkExecution": true
  }
}

For more information, see Customizing configuration sources.

Advanced partitioning strategy

As a consumer of Azure Cosmos DB, you can choose how to partition your data. By default, this repository SDK will partition items using their Item.Id value as the /id partition in the storage container. However, you can override this default behavior by:

  1. Declaratively specifying the partition key path with PartitionKeyPathAttribute
  2. Override the Item.GetPartitionKeyValue() method
  3. Ensure the the property value of the composite or synthetic key is serialized to match the partition key path
  4. Set RepositoryOptions__ContainerPerItemType to true, to ensure that your item with explicit partitioning is correctly maintained

As an example, considering the following:

using Microsoft.Azure.CosmosRepository;
using Microsoft.Azure.CosmosRepository.Attributes;
using Newtonsoft.Json;
using System;

namespace Example
{
    [PartitionKeyPath("/synthetic")]
    public class Person : Item
    {
        public string FirstName { get; set; } = null!;
        public string? MiddleName { get; set; }
        public string LastName { get; set; } = null!;

        [JsonProperty("synthetic")]
        public string SyntheticPartitionKey =>
            $"{FirstName}-{LastName}"; // Also known as a "composite key".

        protected override string GetPartitionKeyValue() => SyntheticPartitionKey;
    }
}

Samples

Visit the Microsoft.Azure.CosmosRepository.Samples directory for samples on how to use the library with:

Deep-dive video

A deep dive into the Azure Cosmos DB repository pattern NET SDK

Contributors ✨

Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):


David Pine

πŸ’» ⚠️ πŸ’‘ πŸ‘€

Invvard

⚠️ πŸ’»

Richard Mercer

πŸ’»

Daniel Marbach

πŸ’»

Manuel Sidler

πŸ’»

Dave Brock

πŸ“– πŸ’»

Cagdas Erman Afacan

πŸ’» πŸ’‘

dcuccia

πŸ’»

VeryCautious

πŸ’» ⚠️

This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!

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Wraps the .NET SDK for Azure Cosmos DB abstracting away the complexity, exposing a simple CRUD-based repository pattern

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