Awesome
TableStorage
Streamlined way of working with Azure Data Tables
Installation
dotnet add package TableStorage
Usage
Create your own TableContext and mark it with the [TableContext]
attribute. This class must be partial.
[TableContext]
public partial class MyTableContext;
Create your models, these must be classes and have a parameterless constructor. Mark them with the [TableSet]
attribute. This class must be partial.
[TableSet]
public partial class Model
{
public string Data { get; set; }
public bool Enabled { get; set; }
}
Properties can also be defined using the [TableSetProperty]
attribute.
This is particularly useful if you are planning on using dotnet 8+'s Native AOT, as the source generation will make sure any breaking reflection calls are avoided by the Azure.Core libraries.
[TableSet]
[TableSetProperty(typeof(string), "Data")]
[TableSetProperty(typeof(bool), "Enabled")]
public partial class Model;
Some times it's also nice to have a pretty name for your PartitionKey
and RowKey
properties, as the original names might not always make much sense when reading your code, at least not in a functional way.
You can use the [PartitionKeyAttribute]
and [RowKeyAttribute]
attributes to create a proxy for these two properties.
[TableSet]
[PartitionKey("MyPrettyPartitionKey")]
[RowKey("MyPrettyRowKey")]
public partial class Model;
Place your tables on your TableContext. The sample below will create 2 tables in table storage, named Models1 and Models2.
[TableContext]
public partial class MyTableContext
{
public TableSet<Model> Models1 { get; set; }
public TableSet<Model> Models2 { get; set; }
}
Register your TableContext in your services. An extension method will be available specifically for your context.
builder.Services.AddMyTableContext(builder.Configuration.GetConnectionString("MyConnectionString"));
Optionally, pass along a Configure
method to adjust some configuration options.
builder.Services.AddMyTableContext(builder.Configuration.GetConnectionString("MyConnectionString"), Configure);
static void Configure(TableOptions options)
{
options.AutoTimestamps = true;
options.TableMode = TableUpdateMode.Merge;
}
Inject MyTableContext
into your class and use as needed.
public class MyService(MyTableContext context)
{
private readonly MyTableContext _context = context;
public async Task DoSomething(CancellationToken token)
{
var entity = await _context.Models1.GetEntityOrDefaultAsync("partitionKey", "rowKey", token);
if (entity is not null)
{
//Do more
}
}
}
For some special cases, your table name might not be known at compile time. To handle those, an extension method has been added:
var tableSet = context.GetTableSet<Model>("randomname");
Linq
A few simple Linq extension methods have been provided in the TableStorage.Linq
namespace that optimize some existing LINQ methods specifically for Table Storage.
Since these return an instance that implements IAsyncEnumerable
, System.Linq.Async
is an excellent companion to these methods. Do keep in mind that as soon as you start using IAsyncEnumerable
, any further operations will run client-side.
Note: Select
will include the actual transformation. If you want the original model, with only the selected fields retrieved, use SelectFields
instead.
If you are using Native AOT, you will need to use SelectFields
as Select
will not work.