Book Image

NHibernate 2 Beginner's Guide

By : Aaron Cure
Book Image

NHibernate 2 Beginner's Guide

By: Aaron Cure

Overview of this book

<p>NHibernate is an open source object-relational mapper, or simply put, a way to retrieve data from your database into standard .NET objects. Quite often we spend hours designing the database, only to go back and re-design a mechanism to access that data and then optimize that mechanism. This book will save you time on your project, providing all the information along with concrete examples about the use and optimization of NHibernate.<br /><br />This book is an approachable, detailed introduction to the NHibernate object-relational mapper and how to integrate it with your .NET projects. If you're tired of writing stored procedures or maintaining inline SQL, this is the book for you.<br /><br />Connecting to a database to retrieve data is a major part of nearly every project, from websites to desktop applications to distributed applications. Using the techniques presented in this book, you can access data in your own database with little or no code.<br /><br />This book covers the use of NHibernate from a first glance at retrieving data and developing access layers to more advanced topics such as optimization and Security and Membership providers. It will show you how to connect to multiple databases and speed up your web applications using strong caching tools. We also discuss the use of third-party tools for code generation and other tricks to make your development smoother, quicker, and more effective.</p>
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
NHibernate 2
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface
Index

Summary


We learned a lot in this chapter about a few random topics to help you implement NHibernate, ASP.NET web applications, and .NET applications in general.

Specifically, we talked about:

  • Implementing the Unit of Work patterns by using the Burrow framework

  • Using the maxRequestLength parameter to help protect us from buffer overflow and other security issues

  • Accessing controls from the Blog.Net project to integrate our blog directly into our ASP.NET website

  • Converting CSS templates into ASP.NET master pages and themes to directly integrate them with our website and give them a more ASP.NET "feel"

  • Writing XML documentation to make our code more readable, usable, and maintainable, and using GhostDoc to automate much of that process, so that it isn't such a burden