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I need to collect some information about existing ORM solutions. Please feel free to write about any programming language.

Can you tell about the best ORM framework you ever use and why is it better then others?

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    There is no such thing as a "language independent" ORM (except in .net, but even than it will only work on .net languages)
    – Nir
    May 27, 2009 at 20:39
  • Thanks guys, I really said not the thing I mean. May 27, 2009 at 20:48
  • With this being so vague and subjective, I'm tempted to make it CW... any thoughts? May 27, 2009 at 20:55
  • Bogdan, please indicate some more details about the technologies such as the language and database you are using. May 27, 2009 at 20:57
  • Either be more specific or make it a community wiki. I recommend the latter, because it looks like Bogdan isn't looking for anything specific. May 27, 2009 at 21:04

6 Answers 6

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I used NHibernate and Entity Framework.

Current stable version of entity framework is very immature. It is too difficult, or impossible to perform common tasks. Testing your code is also difficult since you cannot really separate your entities from your data access classes. But it perfectly integrates with visual studio ide. Setting up is easy and updating all the models from database takes just a few seconds. Upcoming version of EF (4.0) will solve some of this problems.

NHibernate is quite powerful. It supports plain old clr objects, so you can work with simple entities. Configurations provide great control in great detail. Framework capabilities are satisfying and it has a large and active community and good documentation. Setting up and updating entities is a little difficult since you must use generators that looks up your database and generates entities and xml files. It may be tricky to find a generator or a template that exactly fits your needs. But once you set all things up, you will love it.

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I found LINQ to SQL to be a pretty straight forward solution. The first time I used it, I'd say I had a basic ORM working within a few hours, and was creating LINQ queries with it.

Microsoft has an additional ORM (Entity Framework), which I've heard is more complex but may be useful for highly complex distributed applications with multiple data sources etc.

Overall I found LINQ to be an easy and fast to use ORM.

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I have been looking at Telerik Open Access for last few months, in genernal this ORM has been a pain to work with, it was advertised as having extensive linq support but in reality many of the linq features you would normally expect dont work server side and are performed on the client. I also had problems using multiple conditions in a where clause, see my last question. Here are a few things that i found

  • No support for views
  • Unable to map more than one entity to the same table
  • Inheritance and Interface support requires you to make changes to you database schema
  • No visual designer like LINQ to SQL and Entity Framework
  • If you want to perform an insert any related entities must be fetched first

Rohan

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    For the record, I think this review of OpenAccess ORM is out of date and inaccurate. OpenAccess has complete LINQ support, on par with other .NET ORMs, a rich Visual Designer, along with support for views, stored procs, and features that go beyond systems like EF and NH (such as the Domain Service Wizard). I'd encourage you to check-out the latest versions for a more accurate comparison: telerik.com/products/orm.aspx
    – Todd
    Mar 10, 2011 at 20:18
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    You do realize that this was written back in 2009?
    – Rohan West
    Mar 10, 2011 at 22:54
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LINQ2SQL was nice, EF makes sense, but is very complex and SQL Server oriented. NHibernate is special and Telerik OpenAccess (fully .NET / Visual Studio) got a broad set of functionality and professional support.

Since I know the product I can comment on Rohan's concerns:

  • Existing Views can be used and full Views support is coming up
  • Mapping more than one entity to the same table "works" for class hierarchies, limitation with reverse mapping exists
  • Inheritance and Interfacer support "do not require" changes to the the database schema, again limitation with reverse mapping exists though
  • Visual Designer will come, Forward and Reverse Mapping Wizards allow you already to do anything in an easy way
  • There is a workaround for the insert issue mentioned and it will be fixed generally

Check out the Telerik site to find happy customers and feel free to use the telerik forums and support resources for any question.

-Peter

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    you obviously are a Telerik salesperson. I too have used Telerik OpenAccess ORM and dont wish it on my worst enemy. TCP/IP is required for ORM authentication. I cannot build a client release because ORM requires TCP/IP access to the server. This is no good as it forces me to be on site to do a build. If you know of another way to build deployment packages, outside of a network, please let me know. Otherwise, use nHibernate. I really recommend nHibernate over anything else Ive ever used.
    – D3vtr0n
    Sep 8, 2009 at 23:04
  • Cleaning-up the record, Devtron, I think this review is based on a very old version of OpenAccess ORM. All current versions support all methods of SQL Server communication (TCP/IP, Named Pipes, In Memory). The driver support that ships out of the box with OpenAccess exceeds that which ships with NHibernate, too. Check-out the latest versions for an up-to-date view: telerik.com/products/orm.aspx
    – Todd
    Mar 10, 2011 at 20:22
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Im new to OpenAccess ORM and we are using two products. Reporting and OpenAccess. I think there are some features that people missed.

  1. OpenAccess uses graphical designers while nHibernate still uses handwritten xml files
  2. OpenAccess is not limited to SQl Server as EF4 and similiar frameworks

using it is easier and the forums are pretty helpful.

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With ORM there are multiple possibilities, all depends what you want.

As a real ORM mapper I strongly recomment NHibernate and Fluent NH mappings. You need a lot of research to put together a nice architecture, but then nothing stands in your way. With minimal compromises you get real flexibility.

EF6x (core is not prod.-ready IMHO) is called an ORM, but what it generates is more closer to a DAL. There are some thing's you can't do effectively with EF6. Still, this is my favorite tool for a read-model, while I do combine it with NHibernate (where NH I use for a DDD/write model).

Now to performance - its always pro and cons. If you deep deeper into ORM architecture (see my article: avoid ORM bad habits) then you will find intuitively the ways to make it faster. Here's my another article on how to make EF6x 5x faster (at least for read situations): EF6.x 5x faster

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