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Was curious if it will work with MVC 1.0? Looks like the mvc powerpack works with MVC 3 and 4.

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ServiceStack hasn't been tested with MVC v1.0 (and wont be supported). The recommended versions are MVC 3/4+. If you need something more lightweight than this, consider using servicestack on its own e.g. razor.servicestack.net.

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  • Thanks for the reply mythz, is this an example of using servicestack on it's own? servicestack.net/ServiceStack.Hello I ask because I am confused since the base ServiceStack is 3.5 dotnetfx.
    – OutOFTouch
    Jan 16, 2013 at 14:39
  • I have an existing MVC 1.0 application and I am trying to determine what is the best course of action to use ServiceStack restful services as the DAL, from what I can tell though the best course of action would be to upgrade the my MVC application to MVC 4.0 and host servicestack from an /api folder, so that I can utilize the powerpack, but I also wonder if I could avoid upgrading my app right now and use ServiceStack as stand alone services dal and just make json push/pull requests for data and still be able to benefit from not using asp.net session state in my MVC 1.0. Sorry I am confused.
    – OutOFTouch
    Jan 16, 2013 at 14:55
  • Not sure what the question is, but ServiceStack core doesn't have a dependency on MVC itself and just uses standard ASP.NET Http Handlers so it should work (since they're un-related libraries), but we haven't tested this configuration or are supporting it.
    – mythz
    Jan 16, 2013 at 16:26
  • Ok, so if I use SS standalone as a dal and I wanted to consume it with a separate mvc 1.0 application what client usages could I use? I guess I am confused if it is better to use SS stand alone or under an existing framework like MVC 3 or 4 in order to reap the benefits of better caching and session state implementations.
    – OutOFTouch
    Jan 16, 2013 at 18:01
  • There just libraries, you can reuse the same impls irrespective if its standalone or hosted with MVC
    – mythz
    Jan 17, 2013 at 1:16

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