Book Image

NHibernate 3.0 Cookbook

By : Jason Dentler
Book Image

NHibernate 3.0 Cookbook

By: Jason Dentler

Overview of this book

<p>NHibernate is an innovative, flexible, scalable, and feature-complete open source project for data access. Although it sounds like an easy task to build and maintain database applications, it can be challenging to get beyond the basics and develop applications that meet your needs perfectly.<br /><br />The NHibernate Cookbook explains each feature of NHibernate 3.0 in detail through example recipes that you can quickly apply to your applications. Set yourself free from stored procedures and inline SQL. Quite simply, if you build .NET applications that use databases, this book is for you.<br /><br />The book will take you from the absolute basics of NHibernate through its most advanced features and beyond, showing you how to take full advantage of each concept to quickly create amazing database applications. Beginners will learn several techniques for each of the 4 core NHibernate tasks – mapping, configuration, session &amp; transaction management, and querying – and which techniques fit best with various types of applications. In short, you will be able to build an application using NHibernate. Intermediate level readers will learn how to best implement enterprise application architecture patterns using NHibernate, leading to clean, easy-to-understand code, and increased productivity. In addition to new v3.0 features, advanced readers will learn creative ways to extend NHibernate core, as well as techniques using the NHibernate search, shards, spatial, and validation projects.</p>
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
NHibernate 3.0 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface
Index

Fast testing with SQLite in-memory database


Running a full range of tests for a large NHibernate application can take some time. In this recipe, I will show you how to use SQLite's in-memory database to speed up this process.

Note

This is not meant to replace running integration tests against the real RDBMS before moving to production. Rather, it is a smoke test to provide feedback to developers quickly before running the slower integration tests.

Getting ready

  1. Download and install NUnit from http://nunit.org.

  2. Download and install SQLite from http://sqlite.phxsoftware.com.

    Note

    Note: This recipe will work with other test frameworks such as MSTest, MbUnit, and xUnit. Just replace the NUnit-specific attributes with those for your preferred framework.

How to do it...

  1. Create a new, empty class library project.

  2. Add references to our Eg.Core model from Chapter 1, as well as nunit.framework, System.Data.Sqlite, log4net, NHibernate and NHibernate.ByteCode.Castle.

    Note

    System.Data.Sqlite has 32-bit and 64-bit...