Book Image

Mastering Entity Framework Core 2.0

By : Prabhakaran Anbazhagan
Book Image

Mastering Entity Framework Core 2.0

By: Prabhakaran Anbazhagan

Overview of this book

Being able to create and maintain data-oriented applications has become crucial in modern programming. This is why Microsoft came up with Entity Framework so architects can optimize storage requirements while also writing efficient and maintainable application code. This book is a comprehensive guide that will show how to utilize the power of the Entity Framework to build efficient .NET Core applications. It not only teaches all the fundamentals of Entity Framework Core but also demonstrates how to use it practically so you can implement it in your software development. The book is divided into three modules. The first module focuses on building entities and relationships. Here you will also learn about different mapping techniques, which will help you choose the one best suited to your application design. Once you have understood the fundamentals of the Entity Framework, you will move on to learn about validation and querying in the second module. It will also teach you how to execute raw SQL queries and extend the Entity Framework to leverage Query Objects using the Query Object Pattern. The final module of the book focuses on performance optimization and managing the security of your application. You will learn to implement failsafe mechanisms using concurrency tokens. The book also explores row-level security and multitenant databases in detail. By the end of the book, you will be proficient in implementing Entity Framework on your .NET Core applications.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Dedication
Preface
4
Building Relationships – Understanding Mapping

Validating data without client-side scripting


We live in a world that recognizes the open source, performance-oriented, single page applications (reducing server round trips) as professional applications. Microsoft was too comfortable to move beyond server-side development. Later, they started experimenting client-side validations mainly, thanks to MVC2. Now, with MVC Core, they're back in the game!

This brings us to the million dollar question—is the client-side programming really safe? How long will it take for the hacker to break the client-side validation and get into the server? In today's world, even a dummy who has just started to learn how to hack could do that in minutes. To be blunt, we have no control on the client, and we cannot blindly trust the data we receive from the client (which could be hacked/injected by anybody using tools such as Fiddler, REST Client, and many more).

Knowing that the data we receive may not be authentic, why do we still need client-side validation? Simple...