Stratara.Testing.EntityFrameworkCore
3.1.3
dotnet add package Stratara.Testing.EntityFrameworkCore --version 3.1.3
NuGet\Install-Package Stratara.Testing.EntityFrameworkCore -Version 3.1.3
<PackageReference Include="Stratara.Testing.EntityFrameworkCore" Version="3.1.3" />
<PackageVersion Include="Stratara.Testing.EntityFrameworkCore" Version="3.1.3" />
<PackageReference Include="Stratara.Testing.EntityFrameworkCore" />
paket add Stratara.Testing.EntityFrameworkCore --version 3.1.3
#r "nuget: Stratara.Testing.EntityFrameworkCore, 3.1.3"
#:package Stratara.Testing.EntityFrameworkCore@3.1.3
#addin nuget:?package=Stratara.Testing.EntityFrameworkCore&version=3.1.3
#tool nuget:?package=Stratara.Testing.EntityFrameworkCore&version=3.1.3
Stratara.Testing.EntityFrameworkCore
Spin up the real Stratara event-sourcing write stack — IEventSource, IAggregationService,
snapshots, and the EF Core write store — against a shared in-memory SQLite database, in one
call. You exercise production code paths (real serialization, real version tracking, real unique
constraints) without Postgres or Docker.
Builds on Stratara.Testing: the cross-cutting
dependencies are wired with its in-memory doubles (InMemoryKeyStore, TestSessionContextProvider).
Why not a hand-rolled in-memory IEventSource?
Because a bespoke fake would drift from production (subject resolution, concurrency detection,
outbox dispatch, snapshots). This package runs the genuine EventSource on SQLite instead, so your
tests verify the real behavior.
Example
await using var host = EventStoreTestHost.Create(s =>
s.AddAggregatesFromAssemblyContaining<Account>());
await host.ExecuteAsync(async events =>
{
await events.CreateAsync<Account>(id, new AccountOpened(id, tenantId, "Ada", 100m));
await events.AppendAsync<Account>(id, new AmountWithdrawn(30m));
await events.SaveChangesAsync();
});
var account = await host.AggregateAsync<Account>(id);
Assert.Equal(70m, account!.Balance);
Assert.Single(host.Outbox.Bundles); // the SaveChanges emitted one bundle
Contents
EventStoreTestHost— owns a shared open SQLite connection + a configured service provider; exposesExecuteAsync(IEventSource),AggregateAsync<T>(streamId), the presetSession, and the recordingOutbox.IAsyncDisposable.AddStrataraTestingEventStore<TWriteDbContext>(connection, tenantId)— the lower-level DI extension if you compose the provider yourself.StrataraTestWriteDbContext— a ready-made concrete write context (no subclass boilerplate).RecordingEventBundleOutboxDispatcher— captures emitted bundles for assertions.
Notes
- The SQLite connection is
:memory:and shared across every DbContext the unit of work mints — it must stay open for the host's lifetime (the host manages this; dispose it when done). - Register your aggregates (
AddAggregatesFromAssemblyContaining<T>()) so event payload types deserialize on rehydration.
Dependencies
Stratara.Testing,Stratara.Infrastructure,Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore,Stratara.Shared,Stratara.Abstractions,Stratara.ContractsMicrosoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Sqlite
Reference it from test projects only.
| Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
|---|---|
| .NET | net10.0 is compatible. net10.0-android was computed. net10.0-browser was computed. net10.0-ios was computed. net10.0-maccatalyst was computed. net10.0-macos was computed. net10.0-tvos was computed. net10.0-windows was computed. |
-
net10.0
- Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Sqlite (>= 10.0.8)
- Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection (>= 10.0.8)
- Stratara.Abstractions (>= 3.1.3)
- Stratara.Contracts (>= 3.1.3)
- Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore (>= 3.1.3)
- Stratara.Infrastructure (>= 3.1.3)
- Stratara.Shared (>= 3.1.3)
- Stratara.Testing (>= 3.1.3)
NuGet packages
This package is not used by any NuGet packages.
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.
### Added
- **Mediator tenant-isolation behavior** (`Stratara.Mediator`) — `AddStrataraTenantIsolation()`
registers a pipeline behavior that enforces tenant isolation at the mediator entrance, before the
handler runs, for any request that opts in via the new `ITenantScopedRequest` marker
(`Stratara.Abstractions.Multitenancy`). The behavior compares the request's `TenantId` (data owner)
against the ambient session's data-owner tenant and rejects a mismatch with the new
`TenantAccessDeniedException` (translated to HTTP 403 on ASP.NET hosts). `TenantIsolationMode.Default`
enforces only the subject match (privileged cross-tenant operations pass when the endpoint promoted
the session subject to the target); `TenantIsolationMode.Strict` additionally routes every
cross-tenant operation through the new `ICrossTenantAuthorizer`, whose shipped default denies all
cross-tenant access until a consumer registers its own authorizer. Complements the existing
database-side `ApplyGlobalTenantQueryFilters` with a command-/query-entrance guard. New log-event
IDs `114_101`/`114_102`/`114_003` in `Stratara.Diagnostics`.
- **`Stratara.Abstractions.Persistence.ConcurrencyConflictException`** — provider-agnostic
wrapper for an optimistic-concurrency conflict detected during commit. Allows framework-level
code in `Stratara.Projections` (and any consumer outside the `EntityFrameworkCore` package) to
react to concurrency without taking an EF Core dependency. EF Core's `DbUpdateConcurrencyException`
(and provider equivalents) flow through this type.
### Changed
- **`EfTransaction.SaveChangesAsync`** (in `Stratara.EventSourcing.EntityFrameworkCore`) now
wraps `DbUpdateConcurrencyException` thrown by EF Core in the new
`ConcurrencyConflictException`. PostgreSQL unique-violation paths remain on `DbUpdateException`
(different semantics — duplicate-key on insert vs. stale-row on update/delete).
- **`EventSource.SaveChangesAsync`** (write-side append flow) extends its concurrency-handling
catch to the new exception type so the existing append-conflict recovery path keeps working
after the wrap. Behaviour for both EF concurrency conflicts and PostgreSQL unique violations
is unchanged.
### Fixed
- **`TenantProjection` no longer aborts the event bundle on a parallel delete race.** The two
delete handlers (`TenantDeleted`, `CustomerTenantsDeleted`) now swallow
`ConcurrencyConflictException` silently — a missing row is the desired end-state of a delete.
Before this fix, a consumer-side customer-delete cascade saga that emits both
`CustomerTenantsDeleted` and a follow-up `TenantDeleted` for the same tenants would race the
two parallel projection bundles on the same `TenantView` row; the loser threw
`DbUpdateConcurrencyException` out of `SaveChangesAsync`, which propagated through
`ProjectionWorker` and caused `RabbitMqBus` to roll back the entire bundle — including
sibling projections that had already committed. Update handlers (rename / activate /
deactivate / locale / customer-assigned) keep their current behaviour: a concurrency failure
there is a real race that propagates.