Aspire.Azure.Data.Tables
8.1.0
Prefix Reserved
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package Aspire.Azure.Data.Tables --version 8.1.0
NuGet\Install-Package Aspire.Azure.Data.Tables -Version 8.1.0
<PackageReference Include="Aspire.Azure.Data.Tables" Version="8.1.0" />
paket add Aspire.Azure.Data.Tables --version 8.1.0
#r "nuget: Aspire.Azure.Data.Tables, 8.1.0"
// Install Aspire.Azure.Data.Tables as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=Aspire.Azure.Data.Tables&version=8.1.0 // Install Aspire.Azure.Data.Tables as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=Aspire.Azure.Data.Tables&version=8.1.0
Aspire.Azure.Data.Tables library
Registers TableServiceClient as a singleton in the DI container for connecting to Azure Table storage. Enables corresponding health check, logging and telemetry.
Getting started
Prerequisites
- Azure subscription - create one for free
- An Azure storage account or Azure Cosmos DB database with Azure Table API specified. - create a storage account
Install the package
Install the .NET Aspire Azure Table storage library with NuGet:
dotnet add package Aspire.Azure.Data.Tables
Usage example
In the Program.cs file of your project, call the AddAzureTableClient
extension method to register a TableServiceClient
for use via the dependency injection container. The method takes a connection name parameter.
builder.AddAzureTableClient("tables");
You can then retrieve the TableServiceClient
instance using dependency injection. For example, to retrieve the client from a Web API controller:
private readonly TableServiceClient _client;
public ProductsController(TableServiceClient client)
{
_client = client;
}
See the Azure.Data.Tables documentation for examples on using the TableServiceClient
.
Configuration
The .NET Aspire Azure Table storage library provides multiple options to configure the Azure Table connection based on the requirements and conventions of your project. Note that either a ServiceUri
or a ConnectionString
is a required to be supplied.
Use a connection string
When using a connection string from the ConnectionStrings
configuration section, you can provide the name of the connection string when calling builder.AddAzureTableClient()
:
builder.AddAzureTableClient("tableConnectionName");
And then the connection information will be retrieved from the ConnectionStrings
configuration section. Two connection formats are supported:
Service URI
The recommended approach is to use a ServiceUri, which works with the AzureDataTablesSettings.Credential
property to establish a connection. If no credential is configured, the DefaultAzureCredential is used.
{
"ConnectionStrings": {
"tableConnectionName": "https://{account_name}.table.core.windows.net/"
}
}
Connection string
Alternatively, an Azure Storage connection string can be used.
{
"ConnectionStrings": {
"tableConnectionName": "AccountName=myaccount;AccountKey=myaccountkey"
}
}
Use configuration providers
The Azure Table storage library supports Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration. It loads the AzureDataTablesSettings
and TableClientOptions
from configuration by using the Aspire:Azure:Data:Tables
key. Example appsettings.json
that configures some of the options:
{
"Aspire": {
"Azure": {
"Data": {
"Tables": {
"DisableHealthChecks": true,
"DisableTracing": false,
"ClientOptions": {
"Diagnostics": {
"ApplicationId": "myapp"
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
Use inline delegates
You can also pass the Action<AzureDataTablesSettings> configureSettings
delegate to set up some or all the options inline, for example to disable health checks from code:
builder.AddAzureTableClient("tables", settings => settings.DisableHealthChecks = true);
You can also setup the TableClientOptions using the optional Action<IAzureClientBuilder<TableServiceClient, TableClientOptions>> configureClientBuilder
parameter of the AddAzureTableClient
method. For example, to set the first part of "User-Agent" headers for all requests issues by this client:
builder.AddAzureTableClient("tables", configureClientBuilder: clientBuilder => clientBuilder.ConfigureOptions(options => options.Diagnostics.ApplicationId = "myapp"));
AppHost extensions
In your AppHost project, install the Aspire Azure Storage Hosting library with NuGet:
dotnet add package Aspire.Hosting.Azure.Storage
Then, in the Program.cs file of AppHost
, add a Table Storage connection and consume the connection using the following methods:
var tables = builder.ExecutionContext.IsPublishMode
? builder.AddAzureStorage("storage").AddTables("tables")
: builder.AddConnectionString("tables");
var myService = builder.AddProject<Projects.MyService>()
.WithReference(tables);
The AddTables
method will add an Azure Storage table resource to the builder. Or AddConnectionString
can be used to read the connection information from the AppHost's configuration (for example, from "user secrets") under the ConnectionStrings:tables
config key. The WithReference
method passes that connection information into a connection string named tables
in the MyService
project. In the Program.cs file of MyService
, the connection can be consumed using:
builder.AddAzureTableClient("tables");
Additional documentation
- https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-net/blob/main/sdk/tables/Azure.Data.Tables/README.md
- https://github.com/dotnet/aspire/tree/main/src/Components/README.md
Feedback & contributing
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET | net8.0 is compatible. net8.0-android was computed. net8.0-browser was computed. net8.0-ios was computed. net8.0-maccatalyst was computed. net8.0-macos was computed. net8.0-tvos was computed. net8.0-windows was computed. |
-
net8.0
- AspNetCore.HealthChecks.Azure.Data.Tables (>= 8.0.1)
- Azure.Data.Tables (>= 12.8.3)
- Azure.Identity (>= 1.12.0)
- Microsoft.Extensions.Azure (>= 1.7.4)
- Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.Binder (>= 8.0.2)
- Microsoft.Extensions.Diagnostics.HealthChecks (>= 8.0.7)
- Microsoft.Extensions.Hosting.Abstractions (>= 8.0.0)
- OpenTelemetry.Extensions.Hosting (>= 1.9.0)
NuGet packages (2)
Showing the top 2 NuGet packages that depend on Aspire.Azure.Data.Tables:
Package | Downloads |
---|---|
AspireToolKit.Hosting.Testing.Extensions
Extensions for .NET Aspire integration testing to simplify and improve the user experience when testing. |
|
AspireToolKit
All AspireToolKit packages bundled together. |
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.
Version | Downloads | Last updated |
---|---|---|
9.0.0 | 387 | 11/12/2024 |
9.0.0-rc.1.24511.1 | 408 | 10/15/2024 |
8.2.2 | 1,809 | 10/24/2024 |
8.2.1 | 4,595 | 9/26/2024 |
8.2.0 | 9,393 | 8/29/2024 |
8.1.0 | 5,214 | 7/23/2024 |
8.0.2 | 4,282 | 6/28/2024 |
8.0.1 | 6,771 | 5/21/2024 |
8.0.0 | 357 | 5/21/2024 |
8.0.0-preview.7.24251.11 | 180 | 5/7/2024 |
8.0.0-preview.6.24214.1 | 2,664 | 4/23/2024 |
8.0.0-preview.5.24201.12 | 517 | 4/9/2024 |
8.0.0-preview.4.24156.9 | 659 | 3/12/2024 |
8.0.0-preview.3.24105.21 | 889 | 2/13/2024 |
8.0.0-preview.2.23619.3 | 553 | 12/20/2023 |
8.0.0-preview.1.23557.2 | 409 | 11/14/2023 |