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Sukhpinder Singh
Sukhpinder Singh

Posted on • Originally published at Medium

10-Day .Net Aspire Challenge: Day 10 — Azure Table Storage

Step-by-step guide on how to use the .Net Aspire Azure Table Storage component in Visual Studio.

Introduction

.Net Aspire framework is used to develop cloud and production-ready distributed applications. It consists of components to handle cloud-native concerns such as Redis, Postgres etc.

Prerequisites

Objectives

Learn how to create a starter project using .Net Aspire with the Azure Table Storage.

Github Sample: The solution structure is divided into the following projects

  • DotnetAspireChallenge.ApiService

  • DotnetAspireChallenge.AppHost

  • DotnetAspireChallenge.ServiceDefaults

  • DotnetAspireChallenge.Web

Getting Started

Step 1: Install the following NuGet package

Install the following Nuget package into the subsequent project “DotnetAspireChallenge.AppHost

dotnet add package Aspire.Hosting.Azure.Storage
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In the above project, register the Azure storage, table and emulator.

    var storage = builder.AddAzureStorage("storage");
    var tables = storage.AddTables("tables");
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**Note: An Azure Table Storage **connection string is required.

Step 2: Install another NuGet package

Install the following Nuget package into the subsequent project “DotnetAspireChallenge.ApiService

dotnet add package Aspire.Azure.Data.Tables
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then register the context into the Program.cs file as follows

    builder.AddAzureTableClient("tables");
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Step 3: Create an extension class

Create an extension class and register a minimal API send and receive method to demonstrate the QueueServiceClient usage in the API Service

    public static class AspireAzureTableExtension
    {
        public static void MapAzureTableStorageEndpoint(this WebApplication app)
        {
            app.MapPost("/create-table", async (TableServiceClient tableServiceClient) =>
            {
                string tableName = "MyTable";
                try
                {
                    TableClient tableClient = tableServiceClient.GetTableClient(tableName);
                    await tableClient.CreateIfNotExistsAsync();

                    return Results.Ok($"Table '{tableName}' created successfully.");

                }
                catch (RequestFailedException e)
                {
                    Console.WriteLine("HTTP error code {0}: {1}", e.Status, e.ErrorCode);
                    Console.WriteLine(e.Message);
                    return Results.Problem($"HTTP error code {e.Status}: {e.Message}");
                }

                return Results.NotFound("Table creation failed or it does not exist.");
            });
        }
    }
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and finally, register in the Program.cs file

    app.MapAzureTableStorageEndpoint();
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Add additional connection string properties using the JSON syntax

    {
      "Aspire":{
        "Azure": {
          "Data": {
            "Tables": {
              "ServiceUri": "YOUR_URI",
              "DisableHealthChecks": true,
              "DisableTracing": false,
              "ClientOptions": {
              "EnableTenantDiscovery": true
              }
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
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Congratulations..!! You’ve successfully integrated the Azure Table Storage component into the .Net Aspire project.

Github Project

GitHub - ssukhpinder/DotnetAspireChallenge: 10 Day .Net Aspire Challenge

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