Поделиться через


Azure Application Part 2: Access Azure Table Storage

The post on Azure Table Storage has been moved to my new blog at www.robbagby.com.

image

Comments

  • Anonymous
    April 14, 2009
    PingBack from http://microsoft-sharepoint.simplynetdev.com/azure-application-part-2-access-azure-table-storage/
  • Anonymous
    April 15, 2009
    I have decided to start a multi-part blog/screencast series on developing an Azure application from the
  • Anonymous
    April 15, 2009
    Thank you for submitting this cool story - Trackback from DotNetShoutout
  • Anonymous
    April 15, 2009
    The comment has been removed
  • Anonymous
    April 16, 2009
    Kazimanzurrashid,I am on part II on a 10+ part series.  I am building this application piece-by-piece.  If you saw the screencast for part I, you will note that the application had paging (it also was not an ASP.NET UI).  I am purposefully adding parts in digestable chuncks so as to keep them from being too long.  I plan on illustrating the paging capabilities in part IV.  I further plan on illustrating some potential architectures for Table Storage in future posts.Table storage does have some limitations (there is always a give and take in software).  What you get is awesome scalability, what you lose are some features.  Table storage meets the needs of certain apps and not others.  In that light, I plan on implementing this application using SDS as well when the CTP releases, which will limit the constraints (but will also affect the scalability).  This should speak to applications with those needs.  I cannot, however do that until it is in CTP.
  • Anonymous
    April 16, 2009
    Yes this is the whole point. With the "current" features of Azure Table Storage it is not at all possible to develop the kind of application that I mentioned in the above.
  • Anonymous
    April 17, 2009
    The comment has been removed
  • Anonymous
    May 05, 2009
    Preface: If you are visiting this blog post because a search engine matched your error message with the
  • Anonymous
    August 14, 2009
    Very useful post.Would you able to provide a quick example of a query that involves properties other than PartitionKey and RowKey? I do undrestand that these queries would be less efficient in the absence of appropriate indexes. But I would like to know what they would look like.Thanks.
  • Anonymous
    August 23, 2009
    Hi,  I have developed a web role cloud application in which i fetch some data from sql and display it on a gridview on my aspx page. Now i want to host this application on azure. I have created a hosted service as well as storage service. I have changed my .cfcng and .csdef file and have added a connection string in web.config. But I havent added any other class or anything except my aspx page. The site gets deployed and produced but while I open it, I encounter an error.Please tell what am I supposed to do?