Archives
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Raw .NET Data Access / ORM Fetch benchmarks of 16-dec-2015
It’s been a while and I said before I wouldn’t post anything again regarding data-access benchmarks, but people have convinced me to continue with this as it has value and ignore the haters. So! Here we are. I expect you to read / know the disclaimer and understand what this benchmark is solely about (and thus also what it’s not about) in the post above.
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What’s new in LLBLGen Pro v5.0 CTP 2
We’ve released the second CTP for LLBLGen Pro v5.0! Since the first CTP which was released back in March, we’ve been hard at work to implement features we wanted for v5.0. It’s taken a bit longer than expected as the main feature, Derived Models (more on that below), turned out to be a bigger feature than we initially thought and it affected more aspects of the designer than anticipated at first. Nevertheless, I’m very happy with the result, as it turned out even better than I imagined.
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LLBLGen Pro v5.0 CTP 1 released!
We’ve released LLBLGen Pro v5.0 CTP 1! It’s a Community Technical Preview (CTP) of the upcoming v5.0 which is in development since fall 2014. The CTP is open for all v4.x customers (it’s in the customer area, in the v4.2, betas section) and comes with a time-limited license which expires on June 1st, 2015. As this isn’t a full beta, (much) more features are added before beta hits.
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LLBLGen Pro Runtime Libraries and ORM Profiler interceptors are now available on nuget
I caved. For years I’ve denied requests from customers to publish the LLBLGen Pro runtime framework assemblies on nuget, for the reason that if we had to introduce an emergency fix in the runtimes which also required template changes, people with dependencies on the nuget packages would have a problem. While this might be true in theory, in practice it’s so uncommon that this will happen, it more and more turned into an excuse.