Connection Strings
Connection string system is especially needed when you want to create or use a modular system. If you have a monolithic application with a single database, you can go with the ABP startup solution template, which is properly configured for you.
ABP is designed to be modular and multi-tenancy aware. Connection string management is also designed to support these scenarios;
- Allows to set separate connection strings for every module, so every module can have its own physical database. Modules even might be configured to use different database providers.
- Allows to set separate connection string and use a separate database per tenant (in a SaaS application).
It also supports hybrid scenarios;
- Allows to group modules into databases (e.g., all modules into a single shared database or two modules to database A, three modules to database B, one module to database C and rest of the modules to database D)
- Allows to group tenants into databases, just like the modules.
- Allows to separate databases per tenant per module (which might be hard to maintain for you because of too many databases, but the ABP supports it).
All the pre-built application modules are designed to be compatible these scenarios.
Configure the Connection Strings
See the following configuration:
"ConnectionStrings": {
"Default": "Server=localhost;Database=MyMainDb;Trusted_Connection=True;",
"AbpIdentityServer": "Server=localhost;Database=MyIdsDb;Trusted_Connection=True;",
"AbpPermissionManagement": "Server=localhost;Database=MyPermissionDb;Trusted_Connection=True;"
}
ABP uses the
IConfiguration
service to get the application configuration. While the simplest way to write configuration into theappsettings.json
file, it is not limited to this file. You can use environment variables, user secrets, Azure Key Vault... etc. See the configuration document for more.
This configuration defines three different connection strings:
MyMainDb
(theDefault
connection string) is the main connection string of the application. If you don't specify a connection string for a module, it fallbacks to theDefault
connection string. The application startup template is configured to use a single connection string, so all the modules uses a single, shared database.MyIdsDb
(theAbpIdentityServer
connection string) is used by the IdentityServer module.MyPermissionDb
(theAbpPermissionManagement
connection string) is used by the Permission Management module.
Pre-built application modules define constants for the connection string names. For example, the IdentityServer module defines a ConnectionStringName
constant in the AbpIdentityServerDbProperties
class (located in the Volo.Abp.IdentityServer
namespace). Other modules similarly define constants, so you can investigate the connection string name.
AbpDbConnectionOptions
AbpDbConnectionOptions
is the options class that is used to set the connection strings and configure database structures.
Setting the connection strings
ABP uses the AbpDbConnectionOptions
to get the connection strings. If you configure the connection strings as explained above, AbpDbConnectionOptions
is automatically filled. However, you can set or override the connection strings using the options pattern. You can configure the AbpDbConnectionOptions
in the ConfigureServices
method of your module as shown below:
public override void ConfigureServices(ServiceConfigurationContext context)
{
Configure<AbpDbConnectionOptions>(options =>
{
options.ConnectionStrings.Default = "...";
options.ConnectionStrings["AbpPermissionManagement"] = "...";
});
}
Configuring the database structures
Databases
property of the AbpDbConnectionOptions
class is used to group multiple connection strings (of multiple modules) to a single connection string.
See the following connection strings:
"ConnectionStrings": {
"Default": "Server=localhost;Database=MyMainDb;Trusted_Connection=True;",
"AbpIdentity": "Server=localhost;Database=MySecondaryDb;Trusted_Connection=True;",
"AbpIdentityServer": "Server=localhost;Database=MySecondaryDb;Trusted_Connection=True;",
"AbpPermissionManagement": "Server=localhost;Database=MySecondaryDb;Trusted_Connection=True;"
}
In this example, we've defined four connection strings, but the last three of them are the same; AbpIdentity
, AbpIdentityServer
and AbpPermissionManagement
uses the same database, named MySecondaryDb
. The main application and the other modules use the Default
connection string, hence the MyMainDb
database.
What we want to do here is to group three modules (AbpIdentity
, AbpIdentityServer
and AbpPermissionManagement
) in a single database, but we needed to specify each one manually. Because the fallback connection string is the Default
one, if we don't specify it for a module.
To eliminate the repetitive connection string definition, we can configure the AbpDbConnectionOptions.Databases
property to group these connection strings, as shown in the following code (we place that in the ConfigureServices
method of our module class):
Configure<AbpDbConnectionOptions>(options =>
{
options.Databases.Configure("MySecondaryDb", db =>
{
db.MappedConnections.Add("AbpIdentity");
db.MappedConnections.Add("AbpIdentityServer");
db.MappedConnections.Add("AbpPermissionManagement");
});
});
Then we can change the appsettings.json
file as shown in the following code block:
"ConnectionStrings": {
"Default": "Server=localhost;Database=MyMainDb;Trusted_Connection=True;",
"MySecondaryDb": "Server=localhost;Database=MySecondaryDb;Trusted_Connection=True;"
}
MySecondaryDb
becomes the new connection string for the mapped connections.
ABP first looks for the module-specific connection string, then looks if a database mapping is available, finally fallbacks to the
Default
connection string.
Set the Connection String Name
A module typically has a unique connection string name associated to its DbContext
class using the ConnectionStringName
attribute. Example:
[ConnectionStringName("AbpIdentityServer")]
public class IdentityServerDbContext
: AbpDbContext<IdentityServerDbContext>, IIdentityServerDbContext
{
}
For Entity Framework Core and MongoDB, write this to your DbContext
class (and the interface if it has). In this way, ABP uses the specified connection string for the related DbContext
instances.
Database Migrations for the Entity Framework Core
Relational databases require to create the database and the database schema (tables, views... etc.) before using it.
The startup template (with EF Core ORM) comes with a single database and a .EntityFrameworkCore
project that contains related classes and the migration files for that database. This project mainly defines a YourProjectNameDbContext
class that calls the Configure...()
methods of the used modules, like builder.ConfigurePermissionManagement()
.
Once you want to separate a module's database, you typically will need to create a second migration path. See the EF Core Migrations document to learn how to create and use a different database for a desired module.
Multi-Tenancy
See the multi-tenancy document to learn how to use separate databases for tenants.
Replace the Connection String Resolver
ABP defines the IConnectionStringResolver
and uses it whenever it needs a connection string. It has two pre-built implementations:
DefaultConnectionStringResolver
uses theAbpDbConnectionOptions
to select the connection string based on the rules defined in the "Configure the Connection Strings" section above.MultiTenantConnectionStringResolver
used for multi-tenant applications and tries to get the configured connection string for the current tenant if available. It uses theITenantStore
to find the connection strings. It inherits from theDefaultConnectionStringResolver
and fallbacks to the base logic if no connection string specified for the current tenant.
If you need a custom logic to determine the connection string, implement the IConnectionStringResolver
interface (optionally derive from the existing implementations) and replace the existing implementation using the dependency injection system.