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If i have a user defined CLR objects that all inherit from TableEntity, for example these CLR's:

public class Person : TableEntity
{
   public string FirstName { get; set; }
   public string Prefix { get; set; }
   public string LastName { get; set; }
   public string EmailAddress { get; set; }
   public Address Address { get; set; }
   public List<string> AList { get; set; }
   public List<Urls> ListUrls { get; set; }
}

public class Address : TableEntity
{
   public string Street { get; set; }
   public string Zipcode { get; set; }
   public string HouseNumber { get; set; }
   public string City { get; set; }
}

public class Urls : TableEntity
{
   public Uri Real { get; set; }
   public Uri Fake { get; set; }
}

Note: I know that the properties and the classes have to be decorated with attributes for Protobuf-net. But to keep it simple I left those out for now.

And I want to convert this to byte[] using Protobuf-net and serialize that to the Windows Azure Storage and deserialize it back to these CLR objects. How can I accomplish this?

I followed this tutorial, but I got stuck with the byte[]. I don't know how to just write a byte[] to the table.

If the question isn't clear, let me know i'll try to clearify more.

2 Answers 2

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Azure storage with TableEntity is a full framework. I would suggest that trying to do both at the same time is problematic. Perhaps separate the two things. For example:

public class Person { // note no base class
    //...
}

Now serialize that via MemoryStream to get your byte[] (maojg sure to use ToArray(), not GetBuffer()).

Then separately:

public class PersonBlob : TableEntity {
    public byte[] Data {get;set;}
}

(You might even be able to use generics here to support all types at once, but I don't know for sure).

You could also add, say, ToPerson / FromPerson utility methods to get between the two.

Any use?

5
  • Looks great! You said that I might even be able to use generics. What did you mean by that? Isn't public List<string> AList { get; set; } supported for serialization?
    – Quoter
    Aug 24, 2013 at 17:13
  • @Quoter I mean: public class EntityBlob-of-T : TableEntity { public byte[] Data {get;set;} } Aug 24, 2013 at 17:24
  • I was trying out your solution and the To.Array() method always returns 0 bytes. WHen i look into the Azure table, the whole object got saved, in stead of just the Data byte[]. Any idea what might be going wrong?
    – Quoter
    Aug 26, 2013 at 11:25
  • @Quoter a: 0 bytes means no data - did you mark any members as ProtoMember etc? Aug 26, 2013 at 12:43
  • Well there was data in the CLR object. Everything was filled. Yes i marked all as protomember. I think I know what is going wrong. There are too many derrives and interfaces i have to include. But can't add references of those class lib project because it causes a 'circular reference' message from VS2013 or something like that.
    – Quoter
    Aug 26, 2013 at 20:58
0

I fixed it by creating an exact copy of the CLR objects and made them inherit from TableEntity for serialization.

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