Book Image

Microsoft Windows Azure Development Cookbook

By : Neil Mackenzie
Book Image

Microsoft Windows Azure Development Cookbook

By: Neil Mackenzie

Overview of this book

The Windows Azure platform is Microsoft's Platform-as-a-Service environment for hosting services and data in the cloud. It provides developers with on-demand computing, storage, and service connectivity capabilities that facilitate the hosting of highly scalable services in Windows Azure datacenters across the globe. This practical cookbook will show you advanced development techniques for building highly scalable cloud-based services using the Windows Azure platform. It contains over 80 practical, task-based, and immediately usable recipes covering a wide range of advanced development techniques for building highly scalable services to solve particular problems/scenarios when developing these services on the Windows Azure platform. Packed with reusable, real-world recipes, the book starts by explaining the various access control mechanisms used in the Windows Azure platform. Next you will see the advanced features of Windows Azure Blob storage, Windows Azure Table storage, and Windows Azure Queues. The book then dives deep into topics such as developing Windows Azure hosted services, using Windows Azure Diagnostics, managing hosted services with the Service Management API, using SQL Azure and the Windows Azure AppFabric Service Bus. You will see how to use several of the latest features such as VM roles, Windows Azure Connect, startup tasks, and the Windows Azure AppFabric Caching Service.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Microsoft Windows Azure Development Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Creating a data model and context for an entity


The Windows Azure Storage Client library uses WCF Data Services to invoke table operations in the Windows Azure Storage Services REST API. The library has methods providing functionality specific to the Windows Azure Table Service, such as retry functionality allowing methods to be retried automatically in the event of failure and continuation functionality supporting server-side paging.

In the Storage Client library, instances of a model class represent entities of a table. When saving an instance to a table, the Storage Client library creates a property in the entity for each public property of the instance. The model class must contain the Primary Key properties for the entity: PartitionKey and RowKey. An entity can have no more than 252 user-defined properties. Furthermore, if it is used to store query results, then the model class must have a default constructor taking no parameters. The Storage Client library provides the TableServiceEntity...