REST API with ASP.NET Core 7 and MySql
This is a continuation of an earlier post REST API with ASP.NET Core 7 and InMemory Store. In this tutorial I will extend the service to store data in a MySQL Database. I will use Docker to run MySQL and use the same to run database migrations.
Setup Database Server
I will be using a docker-compose to run MySQL in a docker container. This would allow us the add more services that our rest api is depenedent on e.g. redis server for distributed caching.
Let’s start by adding a new file by right clicking on Solution name in Visual Studio and Add New File. I like to name file as docker-compose.dev-env.yml
, feel free to name it as you like. Add following content to add a database instance for movies rest api.
version: '3.7'
services:
movies.db:
image: mysql:5.7
environment:
- MYSQL_DATABASE=defaultdb
- MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=Password123
volumes:
- moviesdbdata:/var/lib/postgresql/data/
ports:
- "33060:3306"
volumes:
moviesdbdata:
Open a terminal at the root of the solution where docker-compose file is location and execute following command to start database server.
docker-compose -f docker-compose.dev-env.yml up -d
Database Migrations
Before we can start using Postgres we need to create a table to store our data. I will be using excellent roundhouse database deployment system to execute database migrations.
I usually create a container that has all database migrations and tool to execute those migrations. I name migrations as [yyyyMMdd-HHmm-migration-name.sql] but please feel free to use any naming scheme, keep in mind how the tool would order multiple files to run those migrations. I have also added a wait-for-db.csx
file that I would use as the entry point for database migrations container. This is a dotnet-script
file and would be run using dotnet-script. I have pinned the versions that are compatible with .net sdk 3.1 as this the version roundhouse
is build against at the time of writing.
Dockerfile to run database migrations
FROM mcr.microsoft.com/dotnet/sdk:3.1-alpine
ENV PATH="$PATH:/root/.dotnet/tools"
RUN dotnet tool install -g dotnet-script --version 1.1.0
RUN dotnet tool install -g dotnet-roundhouse --version 1.3.1
WORKDIR /db
# Copy all db files
COPY . .
ENTRYPOINT ["dotnet-script", "wait-for-db.csx", "--", "rh", "--silent", "--dt", "postgres", "-cs"]
CMD ["Host=movies.db;Username=postgres;Password=Password123;Database=moviesdb;Integrated Security=false;"]
For migration, I have added following under db\up
folder.
20230523_1800_schema_create.sql
CREATE SCHEMA IF NOT EXISTS Movies;
20230523_1801_table_movies_create.sql
```sql USE Movies;
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS Movies ( Id CHAR(36) NOT NULL UNIQUE, Title VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL, Director VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL, ReleaseDate DATETIME NOT NULL, TicketPrice DECIMAL(12, 4) NOT NULL, CreatedAt DATETIME NOT NULL, UpdatedAt DATETIME NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (Id) ) ENGINE=INNODB;
Add following in `docker-compose.dev-env.yml` file to add migrations container and run migrations on startup. Please remember if you add new migrations, you would need to delete container and `movies.db.migrations` image to add new migration files in the container.
```yaml
movies.db.migrations:
depends_on:
- movies.db
image: movies.db.migrations
build:
context: ./db/
dockerfile: Dockerfile
command: '"server=movies.db;database=defaultdb;uid=root;password=Password123;SslMode=None;"'
Open a terminal at the root of the solution where docker-compose file is location and execute following command to start database server and apply migrations to create schema and movies
table.
docker-compose -f docker-compose.dev-env.yml up -d
MySql Movies Store
I will be using Dapper - a simple object mapper for .Net along with MySqlConnector.
Setup
- Lets start by adding nuget packages
dotnet add package MySqlConnector --version 2.2.6 dotnet add package Dapper --version 2.0.123
- Update
IMovieStore
and make all methodsasync
. - Update
Controller
to make methodsasync
andawait
calls to store methods - Update
InMemoryMoviesStore
to make methodsasync
SqlHelper
I have added a helper class under Store
folder named SqlHelper
. It loads embedded resources under the Sql
folder with extension .sql
where the class containing the instance of thhe helper is. Reason for this is I like to have each SQL
query in its own file. Feel free to put the query directly in the methods.
Class and Constructor
Add a new folder under Store
, I named it as MySql
and add a file named MySqlMoviesStore.cs
. This class would accept an IConfiguration
as parameter that we would use to load MySql connection string from .NET configuration. We would initialize connectionString
and sqlHelper
member variables in constructor.
public MySqlMoviesStore(IConfiguration configuration)
{
var connectionString = configuration.GetConnectionString("MoviesDb");
if (connectionString == null)
{
throw new InvalidOperationException("Missing [MoviesDb] connection string.");
}
this.connectionString = connectionString;
sqlHelper = new SqlHelper<MySqlMoviesStore>();
}
I have specified this in appsettings.json
configuration file. This is acceptable for development but NEVER put a production/stagging connection string in a configuration file. This can be put in secure vault e.g. AWS Parameter Store or Azure KeyVault and can be accessed from the application. CD pipeline can also be configured to load this value from a secure location and set as an environment variable for the container running the application.
Create
We create a new instance of MySqlConnection
, setup parameters for create and execute the query using Dapper
to insert a new record, we are handling a NpgsqlException
and throw our custom DuplicateKeyException
if ErrorCode
of exception is DuplicateKeyEntry
.
Create function looks like
public async Task Create(CreateMovieParams createMovieParams)
{
await using var connection = new MySqlConnection(this.connectionString);
{
var parameters = new
{
createMovieParams.Id,
createMovieParams.Title,
createMovieParams.Director,
createMovieParams.ReleaseDate,
createMovieParams.TicketPrice,
CreatedAt = DateTime.UtcNow,
UpdatedAt = DateTime.UtcNow,
};
try
{
await connection.ExecuteAsync(
this.sqlHelper.GetSqlFromEmbeddedResource("Create"),
parameters,
commandType: CommandType.Text);
}
catch (MySqlException ex)
{
if (ex.ErrorCode == MySqlErrorCode.DuplicateKeyEntry)
{
throw new DuplicateKeyException();
}
throw;
}
}
}
And corresponding sql query from Create.sql
file
INSERT INTO Movies(
Id,
Title,
Director,
ReleaseDate,
TicketPrice,
CreatedAt,
UpdatedAt
)
VALUES (
@Id,
@Title,
@Director,
@ReleaseDate,
@TicketPrice,
@CreatedAt,
@UpdatedAt
)
Please note the column names and parameter names should match casing as defined in database up
scripts.
GetAll
We create a new instance of MySqlConnection
, use Dapper
to execute query, dapper would map the columns to properties.
public async Task<IEnumerable<Movie>> GetAll()
{
await using var connection = new MySqlConnection(this.connectionString);
return await connection.QueryAsync<Movie>(
sqlHelper.GetSqlFromEmbeddedResource("GetAll"),
commandType: CommandType.Text
);
}
And corresponding sql query from GetAll.sql
file
SELECT
Id,
Title,
Director,
TicketPrice,
ReleaseDate,
CreatedAt,
UpdatedAt
FROM Movies
GetById
We create a new instance of MySqlConnection
, use Dapper
to execute query by passing the id, dapper would map the columns to properties.
public async Task<Movie?> GetById(Guid id)
{
await using var connection = new MySqlConnection(this.connectionString);
return await connection.QueryFirstOrDefaultAsync<Movie?>(
sqlHelper.GetSqlFromEmbeddedResource("GetById"),
new { id },
commandType: System.Data.CommandType.Text
);
}
And coresponding sql from GetById.sql
file
SELECT
Id,
Title,
Director,
TicketPrice,
ReleaseDate,
CreatedAt,
UpdatedAt
FROM Movies
WHERE Id = @Id
Update
We create a new instance of MySqlConnection
, setup parameters for query and execute the query using Dapper
to update an existing record.
Update function looks like
public async Task Update(Guid id, UpdateMovieParams updateMovieParams)
{
await using var connection = new MySqlConnection(this.connectionString);
{
var parameters = new
{
Id = id,
updateMovieParams.Title,
updateMovieParams.Director,
updateMovieParams.ReleaseDate,
updateMovieParams.TicketPrice,
UpdatedAt = DateTime.UtcNow,
};
await connection.ExecuteAsync(
this.sqlHelper.GetSqlFromEmbeddedResource("Update"),
parameters,
commandType: CommandType.Text);
}
}
And corresponding sql query from Update.sql
file
UPDATE Movies
SET
Title = @Title,
Director = @Director,
ReleaseDate = @ReleaseDate,
TicketPrice = @TicketPrice,
UpdatedAt = @UpdatedAt
WHERE id = @id
Delete
We create a new instance of MySqlConnection
, use Dapper
to execute query by passing the id.
public async Task Delete(Guid id)
{
await using var connection = new MySqlConnection(this.connectionString);
await connection.ExecuteAsync(
sqlHelper.GetSqlFromEmbeddedResource("Delete"),
new { id },
commandType: CommandType.Text
);
}
And corresponding sql query from Delete.sql
file
DELETE
FROM Movies
WHERE Id = @Id
Please note we don’t throw RecordNotFoundException
exception as we were doing in InMemoryMoviesStore
, reason for that is trying to delete a record with a non existent key is not considered an error in Postgres.
Setup Dependency Injection
Final step is to setup the Dependency Injection container to wireup the new created store. Update Program.cs
as shown below
// builder.Services.AddSingleton<IMoviesStore, InMemoryMoviesStore>();
builder.Services.AddScoped<IMoviesStore, MySqlMoviesStore>();
For simplicity I have disabled InMemoryMoviesStore
, we can add a configuration and based on that decide which service to use at runtime. That can be a good exercise however we don’t do that practically. However for traffic heavy services InMemory or Distributed Cache is used to cache results to improve performance.
Test
I am not adding any unit or integration tests for this tutorial, perhaps a following tutorial. But all the endpoints can be tested either by the Swagger UI by running the application or using Postman.
Source
Source code for the demo application is hosted on GitHub in blog-code-samples repository.
References
In no particular order
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