(EDIT: I made it a community wiki as it is more suited to a collaborative format.)

There are a plethora of ways to access SQL Server and other databases from .NET. All have their pros and cons and it will never be a simple question of which is "best" - the answer will always be "it depends".

However, I am looking for a comparison at a high level of the different approaches and frameworks in the context of different levels of systems. For example, I would imagine that for a quick-and-dirty Web 2.0 application the answer would be very different from an in-house Enterprise-level CRUD application.

I am aware that there are numerous questions on Stack Overflow dealing with subsets of this question, but I think it would be useful to try to build a summary comparison. I will endeavour to update the question with corrections and clarifications as we go.

So far, this is my understanding at a high level - but I am sure it is wrong... I am primarily focusing on the Microsoft approaches to keep this focused.

ADO.NET Entity Framework

  • Database agnostic
  • Good because it allows swapping backends in and out
  • Bad because it can hit performance and database vendors are not too happy about it
  • Seems to be MS's preferred route for the future
  • Complicated to learn (though, see 267357)
  • It is accessed through LINQ to Entities so provides ORM, thus allowing abstraction in your code

LINQ to SQL

"Standard" ADO.NET

  • No ORM
  • No abstraction so you are back to "roll your own" and play with dynamically generated SQL
  • Direct access, allows potentially better performance
  • This ties in to the age-old debate of whether to focus on objects or relational data, to which the answer of course is "it depends on where the bulk of the work is" and since that is an unanswerable question hopefully we don't have to go in to that too much. IMHO, if your application is primarily manipulating large amounts of data, it does not make sense to abstract it too much into objects in the front-end code, you are better off using stored procedures and dynamic SQL to do as much of the work as possible on the back-end. Whereas, if you primarily have user interaction which causes database interaction at the level of tens or hundreds of rows then ORM makes complete sense. So, I guess my argument for good old-fashioned ADO.NET would be in the case where you manipulate and modify large datasets, in which case you will benefit from the direct access to the backend.
  • Another case, of course, is where you have to access a legacy database that is already guarded by stored procedures.

ASP.NET Data Source Controls

Are these something altogether different or just a layer over standard ADO.NET? - Would you really use these if you had a DAL or if you implemented LINQ or Entities?

NHibernate

  • Seems to be a very powerful and powerful ORM?
  • Open source

Some other relevant links; NHibernate or LINQ to SQL Entity Framework vs LINQ to SQL

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Hi. can you give me some references for this statement please: "Bad because it can hit performance and DB vendors are not too happy about it" – gbjbaanb Jun 25 '09 at 20:25
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3 Answers

Having worked on 20+ different C#/ASP.NET projects I always end up using NHibernate. I often start with a completely different stack - ADO.NET, ActiveRecord, hand rolled wierdness. There are numerous reasons why NHibernate can work in a wide range of situations, but the absolutely stand out for me is the saving in time, especially when linked to code generation. You can change the datamodel, and the entities get rebuilt, but most/all the other code doesn't need to be changed.

MS does have a nasty habit of pushing technologies in this area that parallel existing open source, and then dropping them when they don't take off. Does anyone remember ObjectSpaces?

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hell, MS has a habit of developing new DB access technologies - remember DAO, RDO, RDS, JRO and SQLXML? Oh, and now OracleClient! – gbjbaanb Jun 25 '09 at 20:32
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I think LINQ to SQL is good for projects targeted for SQL Server.

ADO.NET Entity Framework is better if we are targeting different databases. Currently I think a lot of providers are available for ADO.NET Entity Framework, Provider for PostgreSQL, MySQL, esql, Oracle and many other (check http://blogs.msdn.com/adonet/default.aspx).

I don't want to use standard ADO.NET anymore because it's a waste of time. I always go for ORM.

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I must say that I never used NHibernate for the immense time that needed to start using... time wasted on the XML setup.

I recently did a web application in MVC2, where I did choose ADO Entities Framework and I use Linq all the time.

I must say, I was impressed with the speed! and our site was having around 35 000 unique visitors per day, in around 60Gb bandwidth per day (I reduced radically this 60Gb number by hosting all static files in Amazon S3 - Great .NET wrapper they have, I must say).

I will always go this way. It's easy to start (just add new data item, choose tables and that's it! for every change in the database we just need to refresh the model - made automatically in just 2 clicks) and it's fun to use - Linq rules!

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