238 lines
7.7 KiB
Plaintext
238 lines
7.7 KiB
Plaintext
C# Driver Version 1.4.1 Release Notes
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=====================================
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This minor release fixes a few issues found by users of the LINQ support added
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in v1.4 of the C# driver and also adds support for a few new LINQ query
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operators and where clauses.
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File by file change logs are available at:
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https://github.com/mongodb/mongo-csharp-driver/blob/master/Release%20Notes/Change%20Log%20v1.4.1-Bson.txt
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https://github.com/mongodb/mongo-csharp-driver/blob/master/Release%20Notes/Change%20Log%20v1.4.1-Driver.txt
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These release notes describe the changes at a higher level, and omit describing
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some of the minor changes.
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Breaking changes
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----------------
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There are no breaking changes in this release.
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JIRA issues resolved
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--------------------
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The full list of JIRA issues resolved in this release is available at:
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https://jira.mongodb.org/secure/IssueNavigator.jspa?mode=hide&requestId=11397
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LINQ query support
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==================
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The main purpose of this minor release is to fix some issues found by users of
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the new LINQ support added in v1.4.
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One bug that many have encountered is a NullReferenceException when writing a
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query against an inherited property.
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https://jira.mongodb.org/browse/CSHARP-418
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You would hit this error if you had any queries that were similar to this:
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public class B
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{
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public ObjectId Id;
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}
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public class C : B
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{
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public int X;
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}
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var query =
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from c in collection.AsQueryable<C>()
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where c.Id = id // class C inherits Id from class B
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select c;
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Another bug that a few users have encountered is an ArgumentOutOfRangeException
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when writing a LINQ query that consists of a bare AsQueryable and nothing else:
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https://jira.mongodb.org/browse/CSHARP-419
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as in this sample:
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var query = collection.AsQueryable<C>(); // no where clause
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Normally a query would contain something else besides the call to AsQueryable
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(like a where clause), but this is a legal query and is now supported.
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BSON library changes
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====================
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MaxSerializationDepth
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---------------------
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The BSON serialization mechanism does not support circular references in your
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object graph. In earlier versions of the C# driver if you attempted to
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serialize an object with circular references you would get a
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StackOverflowExpection. The 1.4.1 version now tracks the serialization depth
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as it serializes an object and if it exceeds MaxSerializationDepth a
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BsonSerializationException is thrown. The problem with StackOverflowException
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was that it was fatal to your process, but the BsonSerializationException can
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be caught and your process can continue executing if you choose.
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The default MaxSerializationDepth is 100.
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Interpretation of C# null vs BsonNull.Value
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-------------------------------------------
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When working with the BsonDocument object model a C# null is usually ignored,
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specially when creating BsonDocuments using functional construction. However,
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when mapping between .NET types and the BsonDocument object model a C# null
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will now be mapped to a BsonNull. For example:
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var dictionary = new Dictionary<string, object> { { "x", null } };
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var document = new BsonDocument(dictionary);
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// document["x"] == BsonNull.Value
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and when mapping in the reverse direction a BsonNull will map to a C# null:
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var document = new BsonDocument { { "x", BsonNull.Value } };
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var dictionary = document.ToDictionary();
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// dictionary["x"] == null
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Usually mapping between .NET types and the BsonDocument object model happens
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automatically as needed, but if you want to invoke the mapping yourself you
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can access the BsonTypeMapper directly:
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var dictionary = new Dictionary<string, object> { { "x", null } };
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var document = BsonTypeMapper.MapToBsonValue(dictionary);
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// document["x"] == BsonNull.Value
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or in the other direction:
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var document = new BsonDocument { { "x", BsonNull.Value } };
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var dictionary = (IDictionary<string, object>)BsonTypeMapper.MapToDotNetValue(document);
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// dictionary["x"] == null
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Serializing read-only properties
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--------------------------------
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The class map based serialization support normally serializes only public
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read-write properties (or fields). Sometimes it can be useful to serialize
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read-only properties as well, specially if you want to query against them.
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You can now opt-in your read-only properties so that they appear in the
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serialized document. For example:
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public class Book
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{
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public ObjectId Id;
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public string Title;
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[BsonElement] // opt-in the read-only LowercaseTitle property
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public string LowercaseTitle { get { return Title.ToLower(); } }
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}
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Now when a Book is serialized the document will look like:
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{
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_id : ObjectId("4f8d771dae879111d289dbc0"),
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Title : "For Whom the Bell Tolls",
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LowercaseTitle : "for whom the bell tolls"
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}
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During deserialization any elements in the serialized document that
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correspond to read-only properties are ignored.
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Driver changes
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==============
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MongoServer
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-----------
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There is a new method called IsDatabaseNameValid that you can call to test if
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a database name is valid.
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MongoDatabase
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-------------
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There is a new method called IsCollectionNameValid that you can call to test if a
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collection name is valid.
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MongoGridFS
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-----------
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You can now disable computing the MD5 at the server when uploading a GridFS
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file. You can also disable the client side verification of the MD5 that is
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normally done on Upload or Download. The reason you might choose to disable
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MD5 verification is that it is computationally expensive to compute the MD5.
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LINQ OfType\<T\> query operator
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-------------------------------
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You can now use the OfType\<T\> query operator in LINQ queries. For example:
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var query = collection.AsQueryable<B>().OfType<C>();
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this generates a query against the "_t" discriminator value that is used to
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identify the actual type of a serialized document.
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Additional expressions supported in LINQ where clauses
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------------------------------------------------------
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The following expressions are now supported in LINQ where clauses:
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// d is the document
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// p is a property of the document
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// c is a character constant
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// ca is an array of character constants
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// s is a string constant
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// i, j, k, n are integer constants
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where d.p.Equals(constant)
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where string.IsNullOrEmpty(d.p)
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where d.p.IndexOf(c) == i
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where d.p.IndexOf(c, j) == i
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where d.p.IndexOf(c, j, k) == i
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where d.p.IndexOf(s) == i
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where d.p.IndexOf(s, j) == i
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where d.p.IndexOf(s, j, k) == i
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where d.p.IndexOfAny(ca) == i
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where d.p.IndexOfAny(ca, j) == i
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where d.p.IndexOfAny(ca, j, k) == i
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where d.p[i] == c
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where d.p.Length == n
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where d.p.ToLower().Contains("xyz")
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where d.p.ToLower().StartsWith("xyz")
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where d.p.ToLower().EndsWith("xyz")
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where d.p.ToUpper().Contains("xyz")
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where d.p.ToUpper().StartsWith("xyz")
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where d.p.ToUpper().EndsWith("xyz")
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where d.p.Trim().Contains("xyz")
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where d.p.Trim().StartsWith("xyz")
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where d.p.Trim().EndsWith("xyz")
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where d.p.TrimStart().Contains("xyz")
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where d.p.TrimStart().StartsWith("xyz")
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where d.p.TrimStart().EndsWith("xyz")
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where d.p.TrimEnd().Contains("xyz")
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where d.p.TrimEnd().StartsWith("xyz")
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where d.p.TrimEnd().EndsWith("xyz")
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where d.GetType() == typeof(T)
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where d is T
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// you can use any combination of ToLower/ToUpper/Trim/TrimStart/TrimEnd
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// before Contains/StartsWith/EndsWith
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In the 1.4 version of the C# driver the constant always had to appear on the
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right of a comparison operator. That restriction is lifted in 1.4.1 so now the
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following are equivalent:
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where d.Height < 60
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where 60 > d.Height
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Type of \<T\> in AsQueryable can now be deduced
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-----------------------------------------------
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The type of \<T\> in the call to AsQueryable can now be deduced from the collection argument:
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var collection = database.GetCollection<MyDocument>("mydocuments")
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var query = collection.AsQueryable(); // <T> is deduced to be MyDocument
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