Table of Contents
You can use Berkeley DB in your application through the C# API. To understand the application concepts relating to Berkeley DB, see the first few chapters of this manual. For a general discussion on how to build Berkeley DB applications, see the Berkeley DB Getting Started Guides of C or C++. You can also review the example code of C and C++ from the examples/c and examples/cxx directories. For a description of all the classes, functions, and enumerations of Berkeley DB C# API, see the Berkeley DB C# API Reference Guide.
A separate Visual Studio solution is provided to build the Berkeley DB C# classes, the examples, and the native support library. See Building the C# API in the Berkeley DB Installation and Build Guide for more information.
The C# API requires .NET framework version 2.0 or above, and expects that it has already been installed on your system. For the sake of discussion, we assume that the Berkeley DB source is in a directory called db-VERSION; for example, you downloaded a Berkeley DB archive, and you did not change the top-level directory name. The files related to C# are in four subdirectories of db-VERSION: csharp (the C# source files), libdb_csharp (the C++ files that provide the "glue" between C# and Berkeley DB,) examples/csharp (containing all example code) and test\scr037 (containing NUnit tests for the API).
Building the C# API produces a managed assembly
libdb_dotnetVERSION.dll
,
containing the API, and two native libraries:
libdb_csharpVERSION.dll
and
libdbVERSION.dll
.
(For all three files, VERSION is
[MAJOR][MINOR], i.e. for version 4.8 the managed assembly is
libdb_dotnet48.dll
.) Following the
existing convention, native libraries are placed in either
db-VERSION\build_windows\Win32
or
db-VERSION\build_windows\x64
,
depending upon the platform being targeted. In all cases, the
managed assembly will be placed in
db-VERSION\build_windows\AnyCPU
.
Because the C# API uses P/Invoke, for your application to
use Berkeley DB successfully, the .NET framework needs to be
able to locate the native libaries. This means the native
libraries need to either be copied to your application's
directory, the Windows or System directory, or the location of
the libraries needs to be added to the PATH
environment variable. See the MSDN documentation of the
DllImport attribute and Dynamic-Link Library Search Order for
further information.
If you get the following exception when you run, the .NET platform probably is unable to locate the native libraries:
System.TypeInitializationException
To ensure that everything is running correctly, you may
want to try a simple test from the example programs in the
db-VERSION\examples/csharp
directory.
For example, the ex_access sample program will prompt for
text input lines, which are then stored in a Btree database
named access.db
. It is designed to be run
from either the
db-VERSION\build_windows\Debug
or
db-VERSION\build_windows\Release
directory. Try giving it a few lines of input text and then a
blank line. Before it exits, you should see a list of the
lines you entered display with data items. This is a simple
check to make sure the fundamental configuration is working
correctly.