Getting Started
This tutorial assumes that you've already purchased an ABP Commercial license and have an active ABP Commercial account.
This document assumes that you prefer to use MVC / Razor Pages as the UI framework and Entity Framework Core as the database provider. For other options, please change the preference on top of this document.
Create the Database
Connection String
Check the connection string in the appsettings.json
file under the .Web
project.
"ConnectionStrings": {
"Default": "Server=(LocalDb)\\MSSQLLocalDB;Database=BookStore;Trusted_Connection=True"
}
About the Connection Strings and Database Management Systems
The solution is configured to use Entity Framework Core with MS SQL Server by default. However, if you've selected another DBMS using the
-dbms
parameter on the ABP CLInew
command (like-dbms MySQL
), the connection string might be different for you.EF Core supports various database providers and you can use any supported DBMS. See the Entity Framework integration document to learn how to switch to another DBMS if you need later.
Database Migrations
The solution uses the Entity Framework Core Code First Migrations. It comes with a .DbMigrator
console application which applies the migrations and also seeds the initial data. It is useful on development as well as on production environment.
.DbMigrator
project has its ownappsettings.json
. So, if you have changed the connection string above, you should also change this one.
The Initial Migration
.DbMigrator
application automatically creates the Initial migration on first run.
If you are using Visual Studio, you can skip to the Running the DbMigrator section. However, other IDEs (e.g. Rider) may have problems for the first run since it adds the initial migration and compiles the project. In this case, open a command line terminal in the folder of the .DbMigrator
project and run the following command:
dotnet run
For the next time, you can just run it in your IDE as you normally do.
Running the DbMigrator
Right click to the .DbMigrator
project and select Set as StartUp Project
Hit F5 (or Ctrl+F5) to run the application. It will have an output like shown below:
Initial seed data creates the
admin
user in the database (with the password is1q2w3E*
) which is then used to login to the application. So, you need to use.DbMigrator
at least once for a new database.
Before Running the Application
Installing the Client-Side Packages
ABP CLI runs the abp install-libs
command behind the scenes to install the required NPM packages for your solution while creating the application. So, if you have created the application via ABP CLI or ABP Suite, you don't need to run this command manually.
However, sometimes this command might need to be manually run. For example, you need to run this command, if you have cloned the application, or the resources from node_modules folder didn't copy to wwwroot/libs folder, or if you have added a new client-side package dependency to your solution.
For such cases, run the abp install-libs
command on the root directory of your solution to install all required NPM packages:
abp install-libs
We suggest you install Yarn to prevent possible package inconsistencies, if you haven't installed it yet.
Run the application
Note: When you create an ABP solution, the client-side packages are being restored by ABP CLI and Suite. But if you fetch the source-code that's commited by another team member, your
libs
folder will be empty. Before starting the application, runabp install-libs
command in your Web directory to restore the client-side libraries. This will populate thelibs
folder.
Ensure that the .Web
project is the startup project. Run the application which will open the login page in your browser:
Use Ctrl+F5 in Visual Studio (instead of F5) to run the application without debugging. If you don't have a debug purpose, this will be faster.
Enter admin as the username and 1q2w3E* as the password to login to the application.
The application is up and running. You can start developing your application based on this startup template.