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One of the the coolest things about Data Services is its provider model.
Any data-source can be exposed as an OData Data Service simply by implementing a few interfaces. SharePoint 2010 implements these interfaces to expose list data, and you can too, to expose just about anything: Facebook? Twitter? You name it.
Once you've done that you can query the data using any of the OData clients, including PowerPivot, LINQ over Data Services etc etc.
Now Data Services ships a couple of providers in the box, including one for the Entity Framework and one that works against in memory objects using reflection.
In this series of posts I will walk through creating a Custom Data Service Provider (DSP) slowly layering in more and more capabilities.
DSP Interfaces
There are 5 new interfaces:
- IDataServiceMetadataProvider :
Astoria uses this interface to reason about available ResourceTypes, Properties, Keys, NavigationProperties and ResourceSets. - IDataServiceQueryProvider :
Astoria converts all GET requests into calls against this interface. - IDataServiceUpdateProvider:
If your Data Source is Read/Write, you need to implement this interface because Astoria uses it for all PUT, POST and DELETE requests. - IDataServicePagingProvider:
If you want to gain 'fine grained control' over Server Driven Paging you need to implement this interface. - IDataServiceStreamProvider :
If you want to support Media Link Entries you need to need to implement this interface because Astoria uses it to manipulate the underlying stream.
If you simply want a read-only service you only need to implement IDataServiceMetadataProvider and IDataServiceQueryProvider.
Next time
In Part 2 we'll see how Data Services learns about your custom DSP and gets hold of your implementation of these interfaces...
Comments
- Anonymous
June 24, 2010
chinese versionwww.cnblogs.com/.../DSP2.html