Ticket Hash: | fbbccf88bd7c690a85a28a77ee82b7b410a87760 | |||
Title: | Support .NET Core | |||
Status: | Deferred | Type: | Feature_Request | |
Severity: | Important | Priority: | Medium | |
Subsystem: | Build_AndOr_Projects | Resolution: | Need_More_Info | |
Last Modified: | 2017-09-06 09:25:14 | |||
Version Found In: | ||||
User Comments: | ||||
anonymous added on 2016-01-12 14:01:55:
I think this should work with .NET core. There is no current way to access the SQLiteFactory. Unfortunately this means my products cannot upgrade. mistachkin added on 2016-01-12 19:46:07: Is ADO.NET supported on .NET Core? Are there any docs showing how to migrate existing ADO.NET providers to .NET Core? anonymous added on 2016-05-28 15:46:58: Totally agree with that. .Net Core is the future. mistachkin added on 2016-05-29 15:16:26: It may be the future; however, I do not think it supports the ADO.NET interfaces, which are required by System.Data.SQLite. anonymous added on 2017-09-06 09:25:14: Good news! I tried to include the package System.Data.SQLite.Core in a .NET Core2 application. It generates a warning as it may not work entirely because it doesn't target explicitly .NET Core / NetStandard (NU1701) But it seems to work perfectly, at least for a simple scenario - Create a DB - Encrypt it - Create a table - Insert Into table - Select From table So maybe it is possible to target NetStandard without changes in the code :) |