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SignalR Real-time Application Cookbook

You're reading from   SignalR Real-time Application Cookbook Use SignalR to create real-time, bidirectional, and asynchronous applications based on standard web technologies.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783285952
Length 292 pages
Edition Edition
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Author (1):
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Roberto Vespa Roberto Vespa
Author Profile Icon Roberto Vespa
Roberto Vespa
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

SignalR Real-time Application Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Understanding the Basics FREE CHAPTER 2. Using Hubs 3. Using the JavaScript Hubs Client API 4. Using the .NET Hubs Client API 5. Using a Persistent Connection 6. Handling Connections 7. Analyzing Advanced Scenarios 8. Building Complex Applications Creating Web Projects Insights Index

Scaling out with SQL Server


The SignalR team provides a third backplane option, based on Microsoft SQL Server. This one could be a good fit if both Windows Azure and Redis are not an option for you. It has good resilience characteristics, although it's not the best option in terms of performance.

In this recipe, we'll assume you have a SQL Server instance available, and we'll see how to plug the SQL Server backplane into a simple application inspired by the previous scale-out recipes.

Getting started

As we did previously, we'll reuse the code we wrote in the recipe about the Windows Azure Service Bus backplane, and we'll just show what's to be different when we add the SQL Server backplane. We'll perform our demonstration using a new empty web application named Recipe40.

In order to correctly support the backplane, we need to perform the following actions:

  1. We need to create an empty database. It does not need to have any special name, and the necessary tables will be created by the backplane...

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