whats the recommended Data access layer design pattern if i will apply ado entity frame work later?

不问归期 提交于 2019-12-06 07:54:05
George Stocker

The Repository pattern is a good choice. If you implement it as an interface; then you can change out the concrete classes and not have to change anything else.

The Nerd Dinner walkthrough has an excellent example of the Repository pattern (with interface).

The code you listed there would go in your controller (if you were doing an MVC Application); and you create any class you wanted so long as it implemented the IDinnerRepository interface (or you could have something like an IRepository interface if you wanted to design an interface that everyone had to implement that did the basic CRUD actions, and then implement specific interfaces if you needed more (but let's not go interface crazy).

If you're 'tiering' your application, then that part would go in the "Business Logic" layer, and the Repository would be in the "Data Access Layer". That constructor contract would be the 'loosely' coupled part.

I wound up using a minor variation on the "Repository" pattern. I picked it up from the excellent Nerd Dinner tutorial. You can find the whole tutorial here and the code is on Codeplex.

Don't let all the MVC put you off if your not in an MVC situation, the underlying encapsulation of Linq2SQL is a good one. In a recent update of a codebase I went from Linq2SQL to Linkq2EF and all the changes were nicely dealt with in the repository, no outside code had to be touched.

It is also worth noting that the RIA Services stuff comes with a similar pattern. You point it at Linq2Sql or Linq2EF and it build you a basic layer over it complete with CRUD. That layer is in source code so you could just rip it out and use it in a non RIA project but I just leave it as is and link to it in other projects so I use the layer even if I ignore the over-the-wire abilities.

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