Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
111 lines (77 loc) · 5.93 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

111 lines (77 loc) · 5.93 KB

MapDataReader

Super fast mapping DataReader to a strongly typed object. High performance, lighweight (12Kb dll), uses AOT source generation and no reflection, mapping code is generated at compile time.

.NET Nuget Net stanrdard 2.0

Benchmarks

20X faster than using reflection, even with caching. Benchmark for a tiny class with 5 string properties:

Method Mean Error StdDev Gen0 Allocated
Reflection 951.16 ns 15.107 ns 0.828 ns 0.1459 920 B
MapDataReader 44.15 ns 2.840 ns 0.156 ns 0.0089 56 B

Install via Nuget

Install-Package MapDataReader

Usage with IDataReader

using MapDataReader;

[GenerateDataReaderMapper] // <-- mark your class with this attribute
public class MyClass
{
	public int ID { get; set; }
	public string Name { get; set; }
	public int Size { get; set; }
	public bool Enabled { get; set; }
}

var dataReader = new SqlCommand("SELECT * FROM MyTable", connection).ExecuteReader();

List<MyClass> results = dataReader.ToMyClass(); // "ToMyClass" method is generated at compile time

Some notes for the above

  • The ToMyClass() method above - is an IDataReader extension method generated at compile time. You can even "go to definition" in Visual Studio and examine its code.
  • The naming convention is ToCLASSNAME() we can't use generics here, since <T> is not part of method signatures in C# (considered in later versions of C#). If you find a prettier way - please contribute!
  • Maps properies with public setters only.
  • The datareader is being closed after mapping, so don't reuse it.
  • Supports enum properties based on int and other implicit casting (sometimes a DataReader may decide to return byte for small integer database value, and it maps to int perfectly via some unboxing magic)
  • Properly maps DBNull to null.
  • Complex-type properties may not work.

Bonus API: SetPropertyByName

This package also adds a super fast SetPropertyByName extension method generated at compile time for your class.

Usage:

var x = new MyClass();
x.SetPropertyByName("Size", 42); //20X faster than using reflection
Method Mean Error StdDev Allocated
SetPropReflection 98.294 ns 5.7443 ns 0.3149 ns -
SetPropReflectionCached 71.137 ns 1.9736 ns 0.1082 ns -
SetPropMapDataReader 4.711 ns 0.4640 ns 0.0254 ns -

Tip: Using it with Dapper

If you're already using the awesome Dapper ORM by Marc Gravel, Sam Saffron and Nick Craver, this is how you can use our library to speed up DataReader-to-object mapping in Dapper:

// override Dapper extension method to use fast MapDataReader instead of Dapper's built-in reflection
public static List<T> Query<T>(this SqlConnection cn, string sql, object parameters = null)
{
	if (typeof(T) == typeof(MyClass)) //our own class that we marked with attribute?
		return cn.ExecuteReader(sql, parameters).ToMyClass() as List<T>; //use MapDataReader

	if (typeof(T) == typeof(AnotherClass)) //another class we have enabled?
		return cn.ExecuteReader(sql, parameters).ToAnotherClass() as List<T>; //again

	//fallback to Dapper by default
	return SqlMapper.Query<T>(cn, sql, parameters).AsList();
}

Why the C# compiler will choose your method over Dapper's?

When the C# compiler sees two extension methods with the same signature, it uses the one that's "closer" to your code. "Closiness" - is determined by multiple factors - same namespace, same assembly, derived class over base class, implementation over interface etc. Adding an override like this will silently switch your existing code from using Dapper/reflection to using our source generator (b/c it uses a more specific connection type and lives in your project's namescape), while still keeping the awesomeness of Dapper and you barely have to rewrite any of your code.


P.S. But what's the point?

While reflection-based ORMs like Dapper are very fast after all the reflaction objects have been cached, they still do a lot of reflection-based heavy-lifting when you query the database for the first time. Which slows down application startup significantly. Which, in turn, can become a problem if you deploy the application multiple times a day.

Or - if you run your ASP.NET Core app on IIS - this causes 503 errors during IIS recycles, see dotnet/aspnetcore#41340 and faster app startup helps a lot.

Also, reflection-caching causes memory pressure becasue of all the concurrent dictionaries used for caching.

And even with all the caching, a simple straightforward code like obj.x = y will always be faster then looking up a cached delegate in a thousands-long dictionary by a string key and invoking it via reflection.

Even if you don't care about the startup performance of your app, MapDataReader is still 5-7% faster than Dapper (note - we're not even using Dapper's command-cache store here, just the datareader parser, actual real world Dapper scenario will be even slower)

Method Mean Error StdDev Gen0 Gen1 Allocated
DapperWithCache 142.09 us 8,013.663 ns 439.256 ns 9.0332 1.2207 57472 B
MapDataReader 133.22 us 28,679.198 ns 1,572.004 ns 9.0332 1.2207 57624 B