Is there a method to use an XML file instead of a database in the Entity Framework?
6 Answers
Entity Framework itself is provider-based, and is designed to operate over a relational database. If you really wanted to, you could write your own provider for EF that reads from/writes to an xml file, but it would be a huge amount of work.
I expect you should really be looking at one of:
- LINQ-to-XML
- XML (de)serialization
- XPath/XQuery
- XSLT
Entity Framework doesn't have a natural fit in this scenario.
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If you really want to pursue a XML database, checkout this project: github.com/madskristensen/MiniBlog/blob/master/Website/app_code/… May 20, 2014 at 7:45
Linq to XML isn't all that much actually. I'd go with a serializable solution instead.
I like LINQ to XSD: http://linqtoxsd.codeplex.com/
It is basically LINQ to XML with some classes derived from the XSD to ensure it fits the schema...
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i've found this tool very useful - however the context menu doesn't seem to show up in vs 2010..– benpageAug 5, 2010 at 23:20
I don't think that's really possible.
From MSDN (emphasis mine):
The ADO.NET Entity Framework is designed to enable developers to create data access applications by programming against a conceptual application model instead of programming directly against a relational storage schema.
You can use an oledb connection together with a FORXML command... but you will not have all functionality that is available with other providers...
Is the problem that you need a file-based data store? If so, you could use a SimpleDB data provider. SimpleDB is great if you need a relational database in a single file. MS Access is great for this as well.
XML is designed for communication. If used for storage, it is incredibly inefficient. It might be best to break the two tasks apart and store your data in a relational database and then generate your XML from your data.
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1The question is about Entity Framework, msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/data/ee712907 . Your answer seems to not take that into account.– jpeAug 26, 2013 at 20:38