Using SQLite
Note
The features described on this page are available in all Firely Server editions.
SQLite is a file based database engine. The engine itself does not run separately on the server, but in-process in the application, Firely Server in this case.
For more background on SQLite please refer to the SQLite documentation.
SQLite is the default configuration of Firely Server. For the Administration database there is little reason to change this. For the actual runtime data, (the ‘Firely Server database’) itself, you may run into limitations of SQLite if you put it through its paces. You may find one of the other repositories a better fit then. You can safely use different storage engines for Firely Server Data and Firely Server Administration.
Prefer SQLite for Firely Server Administration
Until Firely Server (Vonk) version 0.7.0 you could use any of the storage engines for both Firely Server Data and Firely Server Administration. Starting with Firely Server (Vonk) 0.7.1 you are encouraged to use SQLite for Firely Server Administration. Over time we will deprecate support for running Firely Server Administration on the SQL Server, MongoDb and Memory storage engines. For Firely Server Data you can of course still use the storage engine of your preference.
Firely Server Administration poses very limited stress on its storage engine, therefore SQLite is adequate. And it provides several advantages:
Runs out of the box: SQLite requires no installation of a database engine, but still provides durable storage (unlike the Memory storage). Thus, you don’t need to setup anything to run Firely Server Administration. And you can download the Firely Server binaries and run them without any further configuration.
Flexible on updates: Many of the features that we will add to Firely Server require changes to the schema of the Administration database. By only supporting SQLite for this, we can provide these features to you more quickly.
Readymade database: In the other storage engines, the conformance resources from the specification had to be imported before Firely Server could start. This would take a couple of minutes. Because SQLite is file based, we can run the import process for you and provide you with a readymade Administration database.
Runs with Facades: perhaps the most important feature. If you build a Firely Server Facade, the facade will not provide support for hosting conformance resources. With Firely Server Administration on SQLite the facade has its own storage and you can use Firely Server Administration out of the box. This enables e.g. validation against your custom resources (that can be imported from your Simplifier project), subscriptions, and other use cases.
Settings for using SQLite for Firely Server Data
Changing a setting means overriding it as described in Changing the settings.
Find the
Repository
setting and set it to SQLite if it not already set to that:"Repository": "SQLite",
Find the section called
SQLiteDbOptions
. It has these values by default:"SQLiteDbOptions": { "ConnectionString": "Data Source=./data/vonkdata.db", "AutoUpdateDatabase": true },
Firely Server will create the database file, but please make sure the directory already exists.
Find the section called
PipelineOptions
. Make sure it contains the SQLite repository in the root path:"PipelineOptions" : { "Branches" : [ "/" : { "Include" : [ "Vonk.Repository.SQLite.SqliteVonkConfiguration" //... ] }, //... ] }
Settings for using SQLite for Firely Server Administration
Set the
SqlDbOptions
underAdministration
for the Administration database similar to those above:"Administration" : { "Repository": "SQLite", "SQLiteDbOptions": { "ConnectionString": "Data Source=./data/vonkadmin.db", "AutoUpdateDatabase": "true" } }
Firely Server will create the database file, but please make sure the directory already exists.
Find the section called
PipelineOptions
. Make sure it contains the SQLite repository in the administration path:"PipelineOptions" : { "Branches" : [ "/": { //... }, "/administration" : { "Include" : [ "Vonk.Repository.SQLite.SqliteAdministrationConfiguration" //... ] } ] }
Administration import history in SQLite
When Firely Server imports Conformance resources, it keeps record of what is has imported. Unlike the SQL Server and MongoDb engines, the SQLite storage engine does not use the .vonk-import-history.json file for that. Instead, in SQLite the import history is stored within the Administration database itself.