All the examples I’ve seen involve either hard-coding the connection string or putting it in my ASP.NET Core application’s settings files.
If you aren’t using ASP.NET Core, or maybe, I don’t know, don’t want to have your local environment’s database details committed to source control, you can try using a temporary environment variable.
First, implement IDesignTimeDbContextFactory
like this (note that IDbContextFactory
is now deprecated):
public class AppContextFactory: IDesignTimeDbContextFactory<AppContext>
{
public AppContextFactory()
{
// A parameter-less constructor is required by the EF Core CLI tools.
}
public AppContext CreateDbContext(string[] args)
{
var connectionString = Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("EFCORETOOLSDB");
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(connectionString))
throw new InvalidOperationException("The connection string was not set " +
"in the 'EFCORETOOLSDB' environment variable.");
var options = new DbContextOptionsBuilder<AppContext>()
.UseSqlServer(connectionString)
.Options;
return new AppContext(options);
}
}
Then, you can include the environment variable when you call Update-Database
, or any of the other EF Core tools:
$env:EFCORETOOLSDB = "Data Source=(local);Initial Catalog=ApplicationDb;Integrated Security=True"; Update-Database