A Cross-SQL-DB Engine Akka.Persistence plugin with broad database compatibility thanks to Linq2Db.
This is a port of the amazing akka-persistence-jdbc package from Scala, with a few improvements based on C# as well as our choice of data library.
Please read the documentation carefully. Some features may have specific use case and have trade-offs (namely, compatibility modes).
If you're migrating from legacy Akka.Persistence.Sql.Common
based plugins, you can read the migration guide documentation, the migration tutorial, and watch the migration tutorial video.
- Akka.Persistence.Sql
- Getting Started
- Sql.Common Compatibility modes
- Migration Guide
- Migration Tutorial
- Features/Architecture
- Performance Benchmarks
- Configuration
- Building this solution
Assuming a MS SQL Server 2019 setup:
var host = new HostBuilder()
.ConfigureServices((context, services) => {
services.AddAkka("my-system-name", (builder, provider) =>
{
builder.WithSqlPersistence(
connectionString: _myConnectionString,
providerName: ProviderName.SqlServer2019);
});
});
You can also provide your own LinqToDb.DataOptions
object for a more advanced configuration.
Assuming a setup with a custom NpgsqlDataSource
:
NpgsqlDataSource dataSource = new NpgsqlDataSourceBuilder(_myConnectionString).Build();
DataOptions dataOptions = new DataOptions()
.UseDataProvider(DataConnection.GetDataProvider(ProviderName.PostgreSQL, dataSource.ConnectionString) ?? throw new Exception("Could not get data provider"))
.UseProvider(ProviderName.PostgreSQL)
.UseConnectionFactory((opt) => dataSource.CreateConnection());
var host = new HostBuilder()
.ConfigureServices((context, services) => {
services.AddAkka("my-system-name", (builder, provider) =>
{
builder.WithSqlPersistence(dataOptions);
});
});
If dataOptions
are provided, you must supply enough information for linq2db to connect to the database.
This includes setting the connection string and provider name again, if necessary for your use case.
Please consult the Linq2Db documentation for more details on configuring a valid DataOptions object.
Note that MappingSchema
and RetryPolicy
will always be overridden by Akka.Persistence.Sql.
These are the minimum HOCON configuration you need to start using Akka.Persistence.Sql:
akka.persistence {
journal {
plugin = "akka.persistence.journal.sql"
sql {
class = "Akka.Persistence.Sql.Journal.SqlWriteJournal, Akka.Persistence.Sql"
connection-string = "{database-connection-string}"
provider-name = "{provider-name}"
}
}
query.journal.sql {
class = "Akka.Persistence.Sql.Query.SqlReadJournalProvider, Akka.Persistence.Sql"
connection-string = "{database-connection-string}"
provider-name = "{provider-name}"
}
snapshot-store {
plugin = "akka.persistence.snapshot-store.sql"
sql {
class = "Akka.Persistence.Sql.Snapshot.SqlSnapshotStore, Akka.Persistence.Sql"
connection-string = "{database-connection-string}"
provider-name = "{provider-name}"
}
}
}
- database-connection-string: The proper connection string to your database of choice.
- provider-name: A string constant defining the database type to connect to, valid values are defined inside
LinqToDB.ProviderName
static class. Refer to the Members ofLinqToDb.ProviderName
for included providers.
Note: For best performance, one should use the most specific provider name possible. i.e. LinqToDB.ProviderName.SqlServer2012
instead of LinqToDB.ProviderName.SqlServer
. Otherwise certain provider detections have to run more frequently which may impair performance slightly.
- Microsoft SQL Server
- MS SQLite
- System.Data.SQLite
- PostgreSQL using binary payload
- MySql
- Firebird
- Microsoft Access OleDB
- Microsoft Access ODBC
- IBM DB2
- Informix
- Oracle
- Sybase
- SAP HANA
- ClickHouse
- Delete Compatibility mode is available.
- This mode will utilize a
journal_metadata
table containing the last sequence number - The main table delete is done the same way regardless of delete compatibility mode
- This mode will utilize a
Delete Compatibility mode is expensive.
- Normal Deletes involve first marking the deleted records as deleted, and then deleting them
- Table compatibility mode adds an additional InsertOrUpdate and Delete
- This all happens in a transaction
- In SQL Server this can cause issues because of page locks/etc.
To run the build script associated with this solution, execute the following:
Windows
c:\> build.cmd all
Linux / OS X
c:\> build.sh all
If you need any information on the supported commands, please execute the build.[cmd|sh] help
command.
This build script is powered by FAKE; please see their API documentation should you need to make any changes to the build.fsx
file.
The attached build script will automatically do the following based on the conventions of the project names added to this project:
- Any project name ending with
.Tests
will automatically be treated as a XUnit2 project and will be included during the test stages of this build script; - Any project name ending with
.Tests
will automatically be treated as a NBench project and will be included during the test stages of this build script; and - Any project meeting neither of these conventions will be treated as a NuGet packaging target and its
.nupkg
file will automatically be placed in thebin\nuget
folder upon running thebuild.[cmd|sh] all
command.
This project will automatically populate its release notes in all of its modules via the entries written inside RELEASE_NOTES.md
and will automatically update the versions of all assemblies and NuGet packages via the metadata included inside Directory.Build.props
.