Tag: postgres
Migrating From PostgreSQL to MongoDB in a .NET EF Core Application
For many reasons—including scalability, flexibility, and modernization—more and more development teams are looking to migrate away from PostgreSQL to MongoDB. In the past, these teams might have been hesitant if they used Entity Framework Core (EF Core) as their object relational mapper (ORM).
With EF Core being one of the most popular ORMs for .NET development, we received a lot of requests from the community for a provider, and so did Microsoft! So it made sense for MongoDB to develop a provider for EF Core. This went generally available (GA) in May 2024 and has been greatly received by the community.
Plus, developers can now use MongoDB's Relational Migrator, a free tool that uses smart algorithms and GenAI to streamline migrating from legacy relational databases to MongoDB, accelerating application modernization initiatives. So now is a great time to take a look at how you too can reap the benefits of all this by migrating your .NET application that uses PostgreSQL with EF Core, to use the MongoDB EF Core Provider.
In this tutorial, we will start off with a simple application that uses PostgreSQL as the database under the hood, and update it to still take advantage of EF Core but use MongoDB instead. So let's get started!
Read MoreData Modeling for Java Developers: Structuring With PostgreSQL and MongoDB
Application and system designs have always been considered the most essential step in application development. All the later steps and technologies to be used depend on how the system has been designed. If you are a Java developer, choosing the right approach can mean distinguishing between a rigid, complex schema and a nimble, scalable solution. If you are a Java developer who works with PostgreSQL or other relational databases, you understand the pain of representing the many-to-many relationships between the tables.
This tutorial will ease your pain with these or other relationships defined in databases by making use of a document database, MongoDB.
In this article, we’ll understand both approaches, contrasting PostgreSQL’s relational rigour with MongoDB’s document-oriented simplicity. You’ll learn how to weigh trade-offs like ACID compliance versus scalability and discover why MongoDB’s design might save you time.
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