The official SurrealDB SDK for .NET.
View the SDK documentation here.
dotnet add package SurrealDb.Net
This library supports connecting to SurrealDB over the remote HTTP and WebSocket connection protocols http
, https
, ws
, and wss
.
The examples below require SurrealDB to be installed and running on port 8000.
You can easily create a new SurrealDB client. All you have to do is define the endpoint
to the SurrealDB instance.
using var clientHttp = new SurrealDbClient("http://127.0.0.1:8000");
using var clientHttps = new SurrealDbClient("https://127.0.0.1:8000");
using var clientWs = new SurrealDbClient("ws://127.0.0.1:8000/rpc");
using var clientWss = new SurrealDbClient("wss://127.0.0.1:8000/rpc");
// Now you can call other methods including Signin & Use
You can use Dependency Injection with the services.AddSurreal()
function.
var options = SurrealDbOptions
.Create()
.WithEndpoint("http://127.0.0.1:8000")
.WithNamespace("test")
.WithDatabase("test")
.WithUsername("root")
.WithPassword("root")
.Build();
services.AddSurreal(options);
Then you will be able to use the ISurrealDbClient
interface or SurrealDbClient
class anywhere.
public class MyClass
{
private readonly ISurrealDbClient _client;
public MyClass(ISurrealDbClient client)
{
_client = client;
}
// ...
}
Note that the default lifetime of this service is Singleton
. You can override this as follows:
services.AddSurreal(options, ServiceLifetime.Scoped);
Consider the following appsettings.json
file:
{
"AllowedHosts": "*",
"Logging": {
"LogLevel": {
"Default": "Information",
"Microsoft.AspNetCore": "Warning"
}
},
"ConnectionStrings": {
"SurrealDB": "Server=http://127.0.0.1:8000;Namespace=test;Database=test;Username=root;Password=root"
}
}
You can use the Connection String instead of having to deal with a SurrealDbOptions
.
services.AddSurreal(configuration.GetConnectionString("SurrealDB"));
It will automatically create a new SurrealDB using the Server endpoint
and configure the client using the different values for namespace
, database
, username
and password
. Note that these values are optional but the endpoint
is still required.
Having a default instance for a project is enough most of the time, but there may be times when you'd like to target multiple SurrealDB instances, either at different addresses or at the same address but inside different NS/DBs. You can use multiple instances as long as you provide 1 interface per client, as in the following example.
interface IBackupSurrealDbClient : ISurrealDbClient { }
interface IMonitoringSurrealDbClient : ISurrealDbClient { }
services.AddSurreal(configuration.GetConnectionString("SurrealDB.Main"));
services.AddSurreal<IBackupSurrealDbClient>(configuration.GetConnectionString("SurrealDB.Backup"));
services.AddSurreal<IMonitoringSurrealDbClient>(configuration.GetConnectionString("SurrealDB.Monitoring"));
Here you will have 3 instances:
- the default one, you can keep using
ISurrealDbClient
interface orSurrealDbClient
class anywhere - a client for backup purpose, using the
IBackupSurrealDbClient
interface - a client for monitoring purpose, using the
IMonitoringSurrealDbClient
interface
[ApiController]
[Route("[controller]")]
public class WeatherForecastController : ControllerBase
{
private const string Table = "weatherForecast";
private readonly ISurrealDbClient _surrealDbClient;
public WeatherForecastController(ISurrealDbClient surrealDbClient)
{
_surrealDbClient = surrealDbClient;
}
[HttpGet]
public Task<IEnumerable<WeatherForecast>> GetAll(CancellationToken cancellationToken)
{
return _surrealDbClient.Select<WeatherForecast>(Table, cancellationToken);
}
[HttpGet("{id}")]
public async Task<IActionResult> Get(string id, CancellationToken cancellationToken)
{
var weatherForecast = await _surrealDbClient.Select<WeatherForecast>((Table, id), cancellationToken);
if (weatherForecast is null)
return NotFound();
return Ok(weatherForecast);
}
[HttpPost]
public Task<WeatherForecast> Create(CreateWeatherForecast data, CancellationToken cancellationToken)
{
var weatherForecast = new WeatherForecast
{
Date = data.Date,
Country = data.Country,
TemperatureC = data.TemperatureC,
Summary = data.Summary
};
return _surrealDbClient.Create(Table, weatherForecast, cancellationToken);
}
[HttpPut]
public Task<WeatherForecast> Update(WeatherForecast data, CancellationToken cancellationToken)
{
return _surrealDbClient.Upsert(data, cancellationToken);
}
[HttpPatch]
public Task<IEnumerable<WeatherForecast>> PatchAll(
JsonPatchDocument<WeatherForecast> patches,
CancellationToken cancellationToken
)
{
return _surrealDbClient.Patch(Table, patches, cancellationToken);
}
[HttpPatch("{id}")]
public Task<WeatherForecast> Patch(
string id,
JsonPatchDocument<WeatherForecast> patches,
CancellationToken cancellationToken
)
{
return _surrealDbClient.Patch((Table, id), patches, cancellationToken);
}
[HttpDelete]
public Task DeleteAll(CancellationToken cancellationToken)
{
return _surrealDbClient.Delete(Table, cancellationToken);
}
[HttpDelete("{id}")]
public async Task<IActionResult> Delete(string id, CancellationToken cancellationToken)
{
bool success = await _surrealDbClient.Delete((Table, id), cancellationToken);
if (!success)
return NotFound();
return Ok();
}
}
Before contributing to this repository, please take note of the Contributing guidelines. To contribute to this project, you will also need to install the following tools:
- The .NET SDK, preferably the latest stable version which is available for download here
- The Rust programming language
The test and benchmark projects are highly dependent on the local Rust crate used by embedded providers. This crate is located in the ./rust-embedded folder of this repository. To build the crate, make sure you installed the Rust toolchain on your machine and then follow these steps:
cd ./rust-embedded
cargo build
If the command line was successful, the compiled libraries are generated in the target folder and automatically copied when the .NET projects are built.
The .NET release versions must follow these rules:
- Should target at least the latest LTS (Long-Term Support) version
- Should target at least the latest STS (Standard-Term Support) version
SurrealDb.Net targets .NET versions following the .NET Support Policy by Microsoft. Additionally, SurrealDb.Net targets .NET Standard 2.1 explicitly to continue support of the Mono runtime (Unity, Xamarin, etc...).
Note that the support for .NET standard 2.1 will be maintained until further notice.
Version | Description | Release Date | End of Support |
---|---|---|---|
.NET Standard 2.1 | June 27, 2016 | N/A | |
.NET 6 | LTS | November 8, 2021 | November 12, 2024 |
.NET 7 | STS | November 8, 2022 | May 14, 2024 |
.NET 8 | Current LTS | November 14, 2023 | November 10, 2026 |
This project is using CSharpier, an opinionated code formatter.
You can install it on your machine via dotnet tool
.
# Run this command at the root of the project
dotnet tool install csharpier
You can then use it as a cli:
dotnet csharpier .
The list of command-line options is available here: https://csharpier.com/docs/CLI
CSharpier supports multiple code editors, including Visual Studio, Jetbrains Rider, VSCode and Neovim. You will be able to run format on file save after configuring the settings in your IDE.
This project was written following testing best practices:
- TDD, leveraging:
- clean code/architecture
- regression testing
- adding new features and tests easily
- a vast majority of tests are integration tests, ensuring compatibility with a concrete SurrealDB version
- each integration test is using a separate SurrealDB namespace/database
Unit/Integration tests are written using xUnit and FluentAssertions.
You will need a local SurrealDB instance alongside the tests. Start one using the following command:
surreal start --log debug --user root --pass root memory --allow-guests
Once ready, go to the root directory of the project and run the following command:
dotnet watch test --project SurrealDb.Net.Tests
Due to the asynchronous nature of Live Queries, they are tested against a separate project named SurrealDb.Net.LiveQuery.Tests
. Where the default test project allow full parallelization, this project completely disable test parallelization. To execute tests on Live Queries, run the following command:
dotnet watch test --project SurrealDb.Net.LiveQuery.Tests
Note 1: Because Live Query tests are not run in parallel, it can take quite some time to run all tests.
Note 2: You can run the two test projects in parallel.
This project also contains benchmarks in order to detect possible performance regressions.
You will need a local SurrealDB instance alongside the tests. Start one using the following command:
surreal start --user root --pass root memory --allow-guests
Once ready, go to the root directory of the project and run the following command:
dotnet run -c Release --project SurrealDb.Net.Benchmarks.Remote --filter '*'
./prepare_embedded_benchmarks.sh -s
dotnet run -c Release --project SurrealDb.Net.Benchmarks.Embedded --filter '*'
./prepare_embedded_benchmarks.sh -e
For Windows:
./prepare_embedded_benchmarks.ps1 -s
dotnet run -c Release --project SurrealDb.Net.Benchmarks.Embedded --filter '*'
./prepare_embedded_benchmarks.ps1 -e