Configuring NHibernate with code

You can also configure NHibernate entirely in code. In this recipe, we'll show you how to do just that.

Getting ready

  1. Complete the steps in the Installing NHibernate recipe.
  2. Add a console application project to your solution called ConfigByCode.
  3. Set it as the Startup project for your solution.
  4. Install NHibernate to ConfigByCode project using NuGet Package Manager Console.
  5. In ConfigByCode, add a reference to the Eg.Core project.

How to do it…

  1. Add an App.config file with this configuration:
    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
    <configuration>
      <connectionStrings>
        <add name="db" connectionString="Server=.SQLEXPRESS; Database=NHCookbook; Trusted_Connection=SSPI" />
      </connectionStrings>
    </configuration>
  2. In Program.cs, add the following using statements:
    using NHibernate.Cfg;
    using NHibernate.Dialect;
  3. In your Main function, add the following code to configure NHibernate:
    var nhConfig = new Configuration().DataBaseIntegration(db =>
    {
      db.Dialect<MsSql2012Dialect>();
      db.ConnectionStringName = "db";
      db.BatchSize = 100;
    });
    var sessionFactory = nhConfig.BuildSessionFactory();
    Console.WriteLine("NHibernate Configured!");
    Console.ReadKey();
  4. Build and run your application. You should see the text NHibernate Configured!

How it works…

In this recipe, we create an NHibernate configuration using methods in the NHibernate.Cfg namespace. These methods offer full type safety and improved discoverability over code configurations in the previous version of NHibernate.

We specify dialect, connection.connection_string_name, and adonet.batch_size with the DatabaseIntegration method. Finally, we build a session factory using the BuildSessionFactory method.

There's more...

Notice that we are still referencing the db connection string defined in our App.config file. If we wanted to eliminate the App.config file entirely, we could hardcode the connection string with this code:

db.ConnectionString = @"Connection string here...";

This, however, is completely inflexible, and will require a full recompile and redeployment for even a minor configuration change.

See also

  • Configuring NHibernate with App.config or Web.config
  • Configuring NHibernate with XML
  • Configuring NHibernate with Fluent NHibernate
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