grate.dotnet-template
0.4.3
dotnet new install grate.dotnet-template::0.4.3
Introduction
This repo contains a dotnet new
template for grate, an opinionated example on how to use grate with dotnet projects
to organize the SQL scripts.
Getting Started
To change/develop templates here, the following resources are recommended:
- https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/nuget/create-packages/creating-a-package#from-a-convention-based-working-directory
- https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/visualstudio/msbuild/how-to-extend-the-visual-studio-build-process?view=vs-2019
- https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/core/tools/custom-templates
- https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/core/tutorials/cli-templates-create-item-template
There are more good samples on how to create dotnet new templates here: https://github.com/dotnet/dotnet-template-samples
A brief walk-through of the grate.dotnet-template project.
This project is a template project. That means that it is a template that contains templates for other
projects. So, it contains two csproj files: The project file itself, grate-dotnet-template
, and
a .csproj
file in the templates folder, which is the basis of the new projects.
Both projects (ab)use .csproj
files to store just SQL files, and some related tools, but in a little different ways.
In both cases, however, we override the default Build
and ResolveReferences
targets of msbuild, to try
to avoid creating any DLLs, which we don't want. There are also a few properties that makes dotnet pack
include
content files in the output, and make the result appropriate for distributing SQL files instead.
The template project includes a .template.config
folder, with template settings (metadata, replacement strings, etc).
This is not included in the resulting project from running the dotnet new
command. However, the rest of the
templates
folder, including the .config
folder, which specifies a .net local tool to use (grate), is included.
Packaging the template
To package up the template, simply run
dotnet pack
The resulting .nupkg
in the package
folder contains a template that can be installed on client machines, and used for creating new projects
of this type. This nupkg should be pushed to a nuget repo.
Installing the template
To use the template, you first need to install it. If you are developing the template itself, locally, you can install it
from the .nupkg
file directly:
dotnet new install <PATH_TO_NUPKG_FILE>
e.g, in the grate-dotnet-template folder:
dotnet pack
dotnet new install ./package/grate.dotnet-template.0.0.1.nupkg
If you just want to use the latest published version of the package, just install it using the package Id (assuming you or someone else have pushed it to a nuget repo you have in your sources):
dotnet new install grate.dotnet-template
More details here on the different ways to install a template: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/core/tools/custom-templates#installing-a-template
Using the template
Given that you have installed the template, as described above, you can use the template to create new database projects:
cd /tmp/
mkdir TestProject
cd TestProject
dotnet new grate --database MyDatabase
This will give you a new project skeleton in the current directory, with a couple of scripts to run them with grate too.
To run the database migration (which grate calls it), you need to set a couple of environment variables:
- ConnectionStrings__MyDatabase
- GrateEnvironment
then you can just run the Deploy.ps1
script. It should install grate as a .net local tool, and call it with the
correct parameters.
Packaging your new project
The template creates a project fit for packaging as a .nupkg
and shipping. To package it, just run
nuget pack
in your newly created project directory. This should create a .nupkg
file (which is simply a zip-file
with a special file structure and a different extension), which can be downloaded somewhere (build server, etc), and
run.
Using you packaged project
To use your project, use some way of downloading the .nupkg
, and just use the files to run the install scripts.
You can use nuget, but it's not a necessity, you can just download the file from somewhere, and treat it as a zip
file, if that better suits your needs.
Example, using NuGet:
❯ nuget install MyDatabase -OutputDirectory somewhere -DirectDownload -Source /tmp/MyDatabase/package/
❯ cd ./somewhere/MyDatabase.1.0.0/content/
❯ ./Deploy.ps1
-
.NETStandard 2.0
- No dependencies.
NuGet packages
This package is not used by any NuGet packages.
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.
Version | Downloads | Last updated |
---|---|---|
0.4.3 | 643 | 5/11/2024 |