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Introduction to Microsoft.Data.SqlClient namespace

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The Microsoft.Data.SqlClient namespace is essentially a new version of the System.Data.SqlClient namespace. Microsoft.Data.SqlClient generally maintains the same API and backwards compatibility with System.Data.SqlClient. To migrate from System.Data.SqlClient to Microsoft.Data.SqlClient, for most applications, it's simple. Add a NuGet dependency on Microsoft.Data.SqlClient and update references and using statements to Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.

There are a few differences in less-used APIs compared to System.Data.SqlClient that may affect some applications. For those differences, refer to the useful porting cheat sheet.

API reference

The Microsoft.Data.SqlClient API details can be found in the .NET API Browser.

Release notes for Microsoft.Data.SqlClient 5.2

New features in 5.2

  • Added support of SqlDiagnosticListener on .NET Standard. #1931
  • Added new property RowsCopied64 to SqlBulkCopy. #2004 Read more
  • Added a new AccessTokenCallBack API to SqlConnection. #1260 Read more
  • Added support for the SuperSocketNetLib registry option for Encrypt on .NET on Windows. #2047
  • Added SqlBatch support on .NET 6+ #1825, #2223 Read more
  • Added Workload Identity authentication support #2159, #2264
  • Added Localization support on .NET #2210
  • Added support for Georgian collation #2194
  • Added support for Big Endian systems #2170
  • Added .NET 8 support #2230
  • Added explicit version for major .NET version dependencies on System.Runtime.Caching 8.0.0, System.Configuration.ConfigurationManager 8.0.0, and System.Diagnostics.DiagnosticSource 8.0.0 #2303
  • Added the ability to generate debugging symbols in a separate package file #2137

Added new property RowsCopied64 to SqlBulkCopy

SqlBulkCopy has a new property RowsCopied64 which supports long value types.

Note that the existing SqlBulkCopy.RowsCopied behavior is unchanged. When the value exceeds int.MaxValue, RowsCopied can return a negative number.

Example usage:

    using (SqlConnection srcConn = new SqlConnection(srcConstr))
    using (SqlCommand srcCmd = new SqlCommand("select top 5 * from employees", srcConn))
    {
        srcConn.Open();
        using (DbDataReader reader = srcCmd.ExecuteReader())
        {
            using (SqlBulkCopy bulkcopy = new SqlBulkCopy(dstConn))
            {
                bulkcopy.DestinationTableName = dstTable;
                SqlBulkCopyColumnMappingCollection ColumnMappings = bulkcopy.ColumnMappings;

                ColumnMappings.Add("EmployeeID", "col1");
                ColumnMappings.Add("LastName", "col2");
                ColumnMappings.Add("FirstName", "col3");

                bulkcopy.WriteToServer(reader);
                long rowsCopied = bulkcopy.RowsCopied64;
            }
        }
    }

Added new property AccessTokenCallBack to SqlConnection

SqlConnection supports TokenCredential authentication by introducing a new AccessTokenCallBack property as a Func<SqlAuthenticationParameters, CancellationToken,Task<SqlAuthenticationToken>> delegate to return a federated authentication access token.

Example usage:

using Microsoft.Data.SqlClient;
using Azure.Identity;

const string defaultScopeSuffix = "/.default";
string connectionString = GetConnectionString();
DefaultAzureCredential credential = new();
using SqlConnection connection = new(connectionString);

connection.AccessTokenCallback = async (authParams, cancellationToken) =>
{
    string scope = authParams.Resource.EndsWith(defaultScopeSuffix)
        ? authParams.Resource
        : $"{authParams.Resource}{defaultScopeSuffix}";
    AccessToken token = await cred.GetTokenAsync(
        new TokenRequestContext([scope]),
        cancellationToken);

    return new SqlAuthenticationToken(token.Token, token.ExpiresOn);
}

connection.Open();
Console.WriteLine("ServerVersion: {0}", connection.ServerVersion);
Console.WriteLine("State: {0}", connection.State);

SqlBatch API

Example usage:

using Microsoft.Data.SqlClient;

class Program
{
    static void Main()
    {
        string str = "Data Source=(local);Initial Catalog=Northwind;"
        + "Integrated Security=SSPI;Encrypt=False";
        RunBatch(str);
    }

    static void RunBatch(string connString)
    {
        using var connection = new SqlConnection(connString);
        connection.Open();

        var batch = new SqlBatch(connection);

        const int count = 10;
        const string parameterName = "parameter";
        for (int i = 0; i < count; i++)
        {
            var batchCommand = new SqlBatchCommand($"SELECT @{parameterName} as value");
            batchCommand.Parameters.Add(new SqlParameter(parameterName, i));
            batch.BatchCommands.Add(batchCommand);
        }

        // Optionally Prepare
        batch.Prepare();

        var results = new List<int>(count);
        using (SqlDataReader reader = batch.ExecuteReader())
        {
            do
            {
                while (reader.Read())
                {
                    results.Add(reader.GetFieldValue<int>(0));
                }
            } while (reader.NextResult());
        }
        Console.WriteLine(string.Join(", ", results));
    }
}

5.2 Target Platform Support

  • .NET Framework 4.6.2+ (Windows x86, Windows x64)
  • .NET 6.0+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows ARM, Linux, macOS)
  • .NET Standard 2.0+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows ARM, Linux, macOS)

Full release notes, including dependencies, are available in the GitHub Repository: 5.2 Release Notes.

Breaking changes in 5.1

New features in 5.1

  • Added support for DateOnly and TimeOnly for SqlParameter value and GetFieldValue. #1813
  • Added support for TLS 1.3 for .NET Core and SNI Native. #1821
  • Added ServerCertificate setting for Encrypt=Mandatory or Encrypt=Strict. #1822 Read more
  • Added Windows ARM64 support when targeting .NET Framework. #1828

Server Certificate

The default value of the ServerCertificate connection setting is an empty string. When Encrypt is set to Mandatory or Strict, ServerCertificate can be used to specify a path on the file system to a certificate file to match against the server's TLS/SSL certificate. The certificate specified must be an exact match to be valid. The accepted certificate formats are PEM, DER, and CER. Here's a usage example:

"Data Source=...;Encrypt=Strict;ServerCertificate=C:\\certificates\\server.cer"

5.1 Target platform support

  • .NET Framework 4.6.2+ (Windows x86, Windows x64)
  • .NET 6.0+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows Azure Resource Manager, Linux, macOS)
  • .NET Standard 2.0+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows ARM, Linux, macOS)

Full release notes, including dependencies, are available in the GitHub Repository: 5.1 Release Notes.

Release notes for Microsoft.Data.SqlClient 5.0

Breaking changes in 5.0

  • Dropped support for .NET Framework 4.6.1 #1574
  • Added a dependency on the Microsoft.SqlServer.Server package. This new dependency may cause namespace conflicts if your application references that namespace and still has package references (direct or indirect) to System.Data.SqlClient from .NET Core.
  • Dropped classes from the Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.Server namespace and replaced them with supported types from the Microsoft.SqlServer.Server package.#1585. The affected classes and enums are:
    • Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.Server.IBinarySerialize -> Microsoft.SqlServer.Server.IBinarySerialize
    • Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.Server.InvalidUdtException -> Microsoft.SqlServer.Server.InvalidUdtException
    • Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.Server.SqlFacetAttribute -> Microsoft.SqlServer.Server.SqlFacetAttribute
    • Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.Server.SqlFunctionAttribute -> Microsoft.SqlServer.Server.SqlFunctionAttribute
    • Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.Server.SqlMethodAttribute -> Microsoft.SqlServer.Server.SqlMethodAttribute
    • Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.Server.SqlUserDefinedAggregateAttribute -> Microsoft.SqlServer.Server.SqlUserDefinedAggregateAttribute
    • Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.Server.SqlUserDefinedTypeAttribute -> Microsoft.SqlServer.Server.SqlUserDefinedTypeAttribute
    • (enum) Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.Server.DataAccessKind -> Microsoft.SqlServer.Server.DataAccessKind
    • (enum) Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.Server.Format -> Microsoft.SqlServer.Server.Format
    • (enum) Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.Server.SystemDataAccessKind -> Microsoft.SqlServer.Server.SystemDataAccessKind

New features in 5.0

  • Added support for TDS8. To use TDS 8, users should specify Encrypt=Strict in the connection string. #1608 Read more
  • Added support for specifying Server SPN and Failover Server SPN on the connection. #1607 Read more
  • Added support for aliases when targeting .NET Core on Windows. #1588 Read more
  • Added SqlDataSourceEnumerator. #1430, Read more
  • Added a new AppContext switch to suppress insecure TLS warnings. #1457, Read more

TDS 8 enhanced security

To use TDS 8, specify Encrypt=Strict in the connection string. Strict mode disables TrustServerCertificate (always treated as False in Strict mode). HostNameInCertificate has been added to help some Strict mode scenarios. TDS 8 begins and continues all server communication inside a secure, encrypted TLS connection.

New Encrypt values have been added to clarify connection encryption behavior. Encrypt=Mandatory is equivalent to Encrypt=True and encrypts connections during the TDS connection negotiation. Encrypt=Optional is equivalent to Encrypt=False and only encrypts the connection if the server tells the client that encryption is required during the TDS connection negotiation.

For more information on encrypting connections to the server, see Encryption and certificate validation.

HostNameInCertificate can be specified in the connection string when using aliases to connect with encryption to a server that has a server certificate with a different name or alternate subject name than the name used by the client to identify the server (DNS aliases, for example). Example usage: HostNameInCertificate=MyDnsAliasName

Server SPN

When connecting in an environment that has unique domain/forest topography, you might have specific requirements for Server SPNs. The ServerSPN/Server SPN and FailoverServerSPN/Failover Server SPN connection string settings can be used to override the autogenerated server SPNs used during integrated authentication in a domain environment

Support for SQL aliases

Users can configure Aliases by using the SQL Server Configuration Manager. These aliases are stored in the Windows registry and are already supported when targeting .NET Framework. This release brings support for aliases when targeting .NET or .NET Core on Windows.

SQL Data Source Enumerator support

Provides a mechanism for enumerating all available instances of SQL Server within the local network.

using Microsoft.Data.Sql;
static void Main()  
  {  
    // Retrieve the enumerator instance and then the data.  
    SqlDataSourceEnumerator instance =  
      SqlDataSourceEnumerator.Instance;  
    System.Data.DataTable table = instance.GetDataSources();  
  
    // Display the contents of the table.  
    DisplayData(table);  
  
    Console.WriteLine("Press any key to continue.");  
    Console.ReadKey();  
  }  
  
  private static void DisplayData(System.Data.DataTable table)  
  {  
    foreach (System.Data.DataRow row in table.Rows)  
    {  
      foreach (System.Data.DataColumn col in table.Columns)  
      {  
        Console.WriteLine("{0} = {1}", col.ColumnName, row[col]);  
      }  
      Console.WriteLine("============================");  
    }  
  }  

Suppress insecure TLS warnings

A security warning is output on the console if the TLS version less than 1.2 is used to negotiate with the server. This warning could be suppressed on SQL connection while Encrypt = false by enabling the following AppContext switch on the application startup:

Switch.Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SuppressInsecureTLSWarning

5.0 Target platform support

  • .NET Framework 4.6.2+ (Windows x86, Windows x64)
  • .NET Core 3.1+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows ARM, Linux, macOS)
  • .NET Standard 2.0+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows ARM, Linux, macOS)

Full release notes, including dependencies, are available in the GitHub Repository: 5.0 Release Notes.

Release notes for Microsoft.Data.SqlClient 4.1

Full release notes, including dependencies, are available in the GitHub Repository: 4.1 Release Notes.

New features in 4.1

Introduce Attestation Protocol None

A new attestation protocol called None is allowed in the connection string. This protocol allows users to forgo enclave attestation for VBS enclaves. When this protocol is set, the enclave attestation URL property is optional.

Connection string example:

//Attestation protocol NONE with no URL
"Data Source = {server}; Initial Catalog = {db}; Column Encryption Setting = Enabled; Attestation Protocol = None;"

4.1 Target Platform Support

  • .NET Framework 4.6.1+ (Windows x86, Windows x64)
  • .NET Core 3.1+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows ARM, Linux, macOS)
  • .NET Standard 2.0+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows ARM, Linux, macOS)

Release notes for Microsoft.Data.SqlClient 4.0

Full release notes, including dependencies, are available in the GitHub Repository: 4.0 Release Notes.

Breaking changes in 4.0

  • Changed Encrypt connection string property to be true by default. #1210 Read more
  • The driver now throws SqlException replacing AggregateException for active directory authentication modes. #1213
  • Dropped obsolete Asynchronous Processing connection property from .NET Framework. #1148
  • Removed Configurable Retry Logic safety switch. #1254 Read more
  • Dropped support for .NET Core 2.1 #1272
  • [.NET Framework] Exception isn't thrown if a User ID is provided in the connection string when using Active Directory Integrated authentication #1359

New features in 4.0

Encrypt default value set to true

The default value of the Encrypt connection setting has been changed from false to true. With the growing use of cloud databases and the need to ensure those connections are secure, it's time for this backwards-compatibility-breaking change.

Ensure connections fail when encryption is required

In scenarios where client encryption libraries were disabled or unavailable, it was possible for unencrypted connections to be made when Encrypt was set to true or the server required encryption.

App Context Switch for using System default protocols

TLS 1.3 isn't supported by the driver; therefore, it has been removed from the supported protocols list by default. Users can switch back to forcing use of the Operating System's client protocols, by enabling the following App Context switch:

Switch.Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.UseSystemDefaultSecureProtocols

Enable optimized parameter binding

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient introduces a new SqlCommand API, EnableOptimizedParameterBinding to improve performance of queries with large number of parameters. This property is disabled by default. When set to true, parameter names aren't sent to the SQL Server instance when the command is executed.

public class SqlCommand
{
    public bool EnableOptimizedParameterBinding { get; set; }
}

Remove configurable retry logic safety switch

The App Context switch "Switch.Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.EnableRetryLogic" is no longer required to use the configurable retry logic feature. The feature is now supported in production. The default behavior of the feature continues to be a non-retry policy, which client applications need to override to enable retries.

SqlLocalDb shared instance support

SqlLocalDb shared instances are now supported when using Managed SNI.

  • Possible scenarios:
    • (localdb)\. (connects to default instance of SqlLocalDb)
    • (localdb)\<named instance>
    • (localdb)\.\<shared instance name> (*newly added support)

GetFieldValueAsync<T> and GetFieldValue<T> support for XmlReader, TextReader, Stream types

XmlReader, TextReader, Stream types are now supported when using GetFieldValueAsync<T> and GetFieldValue<T>.

Example usage:

using (SqlConnection connection = new SqlConnection(connectionString))
{
    using (SqlCommand command = new SqlCommand(query, connection))
    {
        connection.Open();
        using (SqlDataReader reader = await command.ExecuteReaderAsync())
        {
            if (await reader.ReadAsync())
            {
                using (Stream stream = await reader.GetFieldValueAsync<Stream>(1))
                {
                    // Continue to read from stream
                }
            }
        }
    }
}

4.0 Target Platform Support

  • .NET Framework 4.6.1+ (Windows x86, Windows x64)
  • .NET Core 3.1+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows ARM, Linux, macOS)
  • .NET Standard 2.0+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows ARM, Linux, macOS)

Release notes for Microsoft.Data.SqlClient 3.0

Full release notes, including dependencies, are available in the GitHub Repository: 3.0 Release Notes.

Breaking changes in 3.0

  • The minimum supported .NET Framework version has been increased to v4.6.1. .NET Framework v4.6.0 is no longer supported. #899
  • User Id connection property now requires Client Id instead of Object Id for User-Assigned Managed Identity #1010 Read more
  • SqlDataReader now returns a DBNull value instead of an empty byte[]. Legacy behavior can be enabled by setting AppContext switch Switch.Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.LegacyRowVersionNullBehavior #998 Read more

New features in 3.0

Configurable Retry Logic

This new feature introduces configurable support for client applications to retry on "transient" or "retriable" errors. Configuration can be done through code or app config files and retry operations can be applied to opening a connection or executing a command. This feature is disabled by default and is currently in preview. To enable this support, client applications must turn on the following safety switch:

AppContext.SetSwitch("Switch.Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.EnableRetryLogic", true);

Once the .NET AppContext switch is enabled, a retry logic policy can be defined for SqlConnection and SqlCommand independently, or together using various customization options.

New public APIs are introduced in SqlConnection and SqlCommand for registering a custom SqlRetryLogicBaseProvider implementation:

public SqlConnection
{
    public SqlRetryLogicBaseProvider RetryLogicProvider;
}

public SqlCommand
{
    public SqlRetryLogicBaseProvider RetryLogicProvider;
}

API Usage examples can be found here:

using Microsoft.Data.SqlClient;

/// Detecting retriable exceptions is a vital part of the retry pattern.
/// Before applying retry logic it is important to investigate exceptions and choose a retry provider that best fits your scenario.
/// First, log your exceptions and find transient faults.
/// The purpose of this sample is to illustrate how to use this feature and the condition might not be realistic.
class RetryLogicSample
{
    private const string DefaultDB = "Northwind";
    private const string CnnStringFormat = "Server=localhost; Initial Catalog={0}; Integrated Security=true; pooling=false;";
    private const string DropDatabaseFormat = "DROP DATABASE {0}";

    // For general use
    private static SqlConnection s_generalConnection = new SqlConnection(string.Format(CnnStringFormat, DefaultDB));

    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        // 1. Define the retry logic parameters
        var options = new SqlRetryLogicOption()
        {
            NumberOfTries = 5,
            MaxTimeInterval = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(20),
            DeltaTime = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1)
        };

        // 2. Create a retry provider
        var provider = SqlConfigurableRetryFactory.CreateExponentialRetryProvider(options);

        // define the retrying event to report the execution attempts
        provider.Retrying += (object s, SqlRetryingEventArgs e) =>
            {
                int attempts = e.RetryCount + 1;
                Console.ForegroundColor = ConsoleColor.Yellow;
                Console.WriteLine($"attempt {attempts} - current delay time:{e.Delay} \n");
                Console.ForegroundColor = ConsoleColor.DarkGray;
                if (e.Exceptions[e.Exceptions.Count - 1] is SqlException ex)
                {
                    Console.WriteLine($"{ex.Number}-{ex.Message}\n");
                }
                else
                {
                    Console.WriteLine($"{e.Exceptions[e.Exceptions.Count - 1].Message}\n");
                }

                // It is not a good practice to do time-consuming tasks inside the retrying event which blocks the running task.
                // Use parallel programming patterns to mitigate it.
                if (e.RetryCount == provider.RetryLogic.NumberOfTries - 1)
                {
                    Console.WriteLine("This is the last chance to execute the command before throwing the exception.");
                    Console.WriteLine("Press Enter when you're ready:");
                    Console.ReadLine();
                    Console.WriteLine("continue ...");
                }
            };

        // Open the general connection.
        s_generalConnection.Open();

        try
        {
            // Assume the database is being created and other services are going to connect to it.
            RetryConnection(provider);
        }
        catch
        {
            // exception is thrown if connecting to the database isn't successful.
            throw;
        }
    }

    private static void ExecuteCommand(SqlConnection cn, string command)
    {
        using var cmd = cn.CreateCommand();
        cmd.CommandText = command;
        cmd.ExecuteNonQuery();
    }

    private static void RetryConnection(SqlRetryLogicBaseProvider provider)
    {
        // Change this if you already have a database with the same name in your database.
        string dbName = "Invalid_DB_Open";

        // Create a connection to an invalid database.
        using var cnn = new SqlConnection(string.Format(CnnStringFormat, dbName));
        // 3. Assign the `provider` to the connection
        cnn.RetryLogicProvider = provider;
        Console.WriteLine($"Connecting to the [{dbName}] ...");
        // Manually execute the following command in SSMS to create the invalid database while the SqlConnection is attempting to connect to it.
        // >> CREATE DATABASE Invalid_DB_Open;
        Console.WriteLine($"Manually, run the 'CREATE DATABASE {dbName};' in the SQL Server before exceeding the {provider.RetryLogic.NumberOfTries} attempts.");
        // the connection tries to connect to the database 5 times
        Console.WriteLine("The first attempt, before getting into the retry logic.");
        cnn.Open();
        Console.WriteLine($"Connected to the [{dbName}] successfully.");

        cnn.Close();

        // Drop it after test
        ExecuteCommand(s_generalConnection, string.Format(DropDatabaseFormat, dbName));
        Console.WriteLine($"The [{dbName}] is removed.");
    }
}
/// Detecting retriable exceptions is a vital part of the retry pattern.
/// Before applying retry logic it is important to investigate exceptions and choose a retry provider that best fits your scenario.
/// First, log your exceptions and find transient faults.
/// The purpose of this sample is to illustrate how to use this feature and the condition might not be realistic.

    private const string DefaultDB = "Northwind";
    private const string CnnStringFormat = "Server=localhost; Initial Catalog={0}; Integrated Security=true; pooling=false;";
    private const string DropDatabaseFormat = "DROP DATABASE {0}";
    private const string CreateDatabaseFormat = "CREATE DATABASE {0}";

    // For general use
    private static SqlConnection s_generalConnection = new SqlConnection(string.Format(CnnStringFormat, DefaultDB));

    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        // 1. Define the retry logic parameters
        var options = new SqlRetryLogicOption()
        {
            NumberOfTries = 5,
            MaxTimeInterval = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(20),
            DeltaTime = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1),
            AuthorizedSqlCondition = null,
            // error number 3702 : Cannot drop database "xxx" because it is currently in use.
            TransientErrors = new int[] {3702}
        };

        // 2. Create a retry provider
        var provider = SqlConfigurableRetryFactory.CreateExponentialRetryProvider(options);

        // define the retrying event to report execution attempts
        provider.Retrying += (object s, SqlRetryingEventArgs e) =>
            {
                int attempts = e.RetryCount + 1;
                Console.ForegroundColor = ConsoleColor.Yellow;
                Console.WriteLine($"attempt {attempts} - current delay time:{e.Delay} \n");
                Console.ForegroundColor = ConsoleColor.DarkGray;
                if (e.Exceptions[e.Exceptions.Count - 1] is SqlException ex)
                {
                    Console.WriteLine($"{ex.Number}-{ex.Message}\n");
                }
                else
                {
                    Console.WriteLine($"{e.Exceptions[e.Exceptions.Count - 1].Message}\n");
                }

                // It is not good practice to do time-consuming tasks inside the retrying event which blocks the running task.
                // Use parallel programming patterns to mitigate it.
                if (e.RetryCount == provider.RetryLogic.NumberOfTries - 1)
                {
                    Console.WriteLine("This is the last chance to execute the command before throwing the exception.");
                    Console.WriteLine("Press Enter when you're ready:");
                    Console.ReadLine();
                    Console.WriteLine("continue ...");
                }
            };

        // Open a general connection.
        s_generalConnection.Open();

        try
        {
            // Assume the database is creating and other services are going to connect to it.
            RetryCommand(provider);
        }
        catch
        {
            s_generalConnection.Close();
            // exception is thrown if connecting to the database isn't successful.
            throw;
        }
        s_generalConnection.Close();
    }

    private static void ExecuteCommand(SqlConnection cn, string command)
    {
        using var cmd = cn.CreateCommand();
        cmd.CommandText = command;
        cmd.ExecuteNonQuery();
    }

    private static void FindActiveSessions(SqlConnection cnn, string dbName)
    {
        using var cmd = cnn.CreateCommand();
        cmd.CommandText = "DECLARE @query NVARCHAR(max) = '';" + Environment.NewLine +
            $"SELECT @query = @query + 'KILL ' + CAST(spid as varchar(50)) + ';' FROM sys.sysprocesses WHERE dbid = DB_ID('{dbName}')" + Environment.NewLine +
            "SELECT @query AS Active_sessions;";
        var reader = cmd.ExecuteReader();
        if (reader.Read())
        {
            Console.ForegroundColor = ConsoleColor.Green;
            Console.Write($">> Execute the '{reader.GetString(0)}' command in SQL Server to unblock the running task.");
            Console.ResetColor();
        }
        reader.Close();
    }
var RetryLogicOption = new SqlRetryLogicOption()
{
    NumberOfTries = 5,
    // Declare the error number 102 as a transient error to apply the retry logic when it occurs.
    TransientErrors = new int[] { 102 },
    // When a SqlCommand executes out of a transaction, 
    // the retry logic will apply if it contains a 'select' keyword.
    AuthorizedSqlCondition = x => string.IsNullOrEmpty(x)
            || Regex.IsMatch(x, @"\b(SELECT)\b", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase),
    DeltaTime = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1),
    MaxTimeInterval = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(60),
    MinTimeInterval = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(3)
};

New configuration sections have also been introduced to do the same registration from configuration files, without having to modify existing code:

<section name="SqlConfigurableRetryLogicConnection"
            type="Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SqlConfigurableRetryConnectionSection, Microsoft.Data.SqlClient"/>

<section name="SqlConfigurableRetryLogicCommand"
            type="Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SqlConfigurableRetryCommandSection, Microsoft.Data.SqlClient"/>

Here's a simple example of using the new configuration sections in configuration files:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<configuration>
  <configSections>
    <section name="SqlConfigurableRetryLogicConnection"
             type="Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SqlConfigurableRetryConnectionSection, Microsoft.Data.SqlClient"/>
    <section name="SqlConfigurableRetryLogicCommand"
             type="Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SqlConfigurableRetryCommandSection, Microsoft.Data.SqlClient"/>

    <section name="AppContextSwitchOverrides"
             type="Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.AppContextSwitchOverridesSection, Microsoft.Data.SqlClient"/>
  </configSections>

  <!--Enable safety switch in .NET Core-->
  <AppContextSwitchOverrides value="Switch.Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.EnableRetryLogic=true"/>

  <!--Retry method for SqlConnection-->
  <SqlConfigurableRetryLogicConnection retryMethod ="CreateFixedRetryProvider" numberOfTries ="3" deltaTime ="00:00:10" maxTime ="00:00:30"
                                    transientErrors="40615" />

  <!--Retry method for SqlCommand containing SELECT queries-->
  <SqlConfigurableRetryLogicCommand retryMethod ="CreateIncrementalRetryProvider" numberOfTries ="5" deltaTime ="00:00:10" maxTime ="00:01:10"
                                    authorizedSqlCondition="\b(SELECT)\b" transientErrors="102, 4060, 0"/>
</configuration>

Alternatively, applications can implement their own provider of the SqlRetryLogicBaseProvider base class, and register it with SqlConnection/SqlCommand.

Event Counters

The following counters are now available for applications targeting .NET Core 3.1+ and .NET Standard 2.1+:

Name Display name Description
active-hard-connections Actual active connections currently made to servers The number of connections currently open to database servers.
hard-connects Actual connection rate to servers The number of connections per second being opened to database servers.
hard-disconnects Actual disconnection rate from servers The number of disconnects per second being made to database servers.
active-soft-connects Active connections retrieved from the connection pool The number of already-open connections being consumed from the connection pool.
soft-connects Rate of connections retrieved from the connection pool The number of connections per second being consumed from the connection pool.
soft-disconnects Rate of connections returned to the connection pool The number of connections per second being returned to the connection pool.
number-of-non-pooled-connections Number of connections not using connection pooling The number of active connections that aren't pooled.
number-of-pooled-connections Number of connections managed by the connection pool The number of active connections managed the connection pooling infrastructure.
number-of-active-connection-pool-groups Number of active unique connection strings The number of active, unique connection pool groups. This counter is based on the number of unique connection strings found in the AppDomain.
number-of-inactive-connection-pool-groups Number of unique connection strings waiting for pruning The number of unique connection pool groups marked for pruning. This counter is based on the number of unique connection strings found in the AppDomain.
number-of-active-connection-pools Number of active connection pools The total number of connection pools.
number-of-inactive-connection-pools Number of inactive connection pools The number of inactive connection pools with no recent activity and waiting to be disposed.
number-of-active-connections Number of active connections The number of active connections currently in use.
number-of-free-connections Number of ready connections in the connection pool The number of open connections available for use in the connection pools.
number-of-stasis-connections Number of connections currently waiting to be ready The number of connections currently awaiting completion of an action and which are unavailable for use by the application.
number-of-reclaimed-connections Number of reclaimed connections from GC The number of connections reclaimed through garbage collection where Close or Dispose wasn't called by the application. Note Not explicitly closing or disposing connections hurts performance.

These counters can be used with .NET Core global CLI tools: dotnet-counters and dotnet-trace in Windows or Linux and PerfView in Windows, using Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.EventSource as the provider name. For more information, see Retrieve event counter values.

dotnet-counters monitor Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.EventSource -p
PerfView /onlyProviders=*Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.EventSource:EventCounterIntervalSec=1 collect

Azure Identity dependency introduction

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient now depends on the Azure.Identity library to acquire tokens for "Active Directory Managed Identity/MSI" and "Active Directory Service Principal" authentication modes. This change brings the following changes to the public surface area:

  • Breaking Change
    The "User Id" connection property now requires "Client Id" instead of "Object Id" for "User-Assigned Managed Identity".
  • Public API
    New read-only public property: SqlAuthenticationParameters.ConnectionTimeout
  • Dependency
    Azure.Identity v1.3.0

Event tracing improvements in SNI.dll

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SNI (.NET Framework dependency) and Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SNI.runtime (.NET Core/Standard dependency) versions have been updated to v3.0.0-preview1.21104.2. Event tracing in SNI.dll is no longer enabled through a client application. Subscribing a session to the Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.EventSource provider through tools like xperf or perfview is sufficient. For more information, see Event tracing support in Native SNI.

Enabling row version null behavior

SqlDataReader returns a DBNull value instead of an empty byte[]. To enable the legacy behavior, you must enable the following AppContext switch on application startup: "Switch.Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.LegacyRowVersionNullBehavior"

Microsoft Entra default authentication support

Note

While Microsoft Entra ID is the new name for Azure Active Directory (Azure AD), to prevent disrupting existing environments, Azure AD still remains in some hardcoded elements such as UI fields, connection providers, error codes, and cmdlets. In this article, the two names are interchangeable.

This PR introduces a new SQL Authentication method, Active Directory Default. This authentication mode widens the possibilities of user authentication with Microsoft Entra ID, extending login solutions to the client environment, Visual Studio Code, Visual Studio, Azure CLI etc.

With this authentication mode, the driver acquires a token by passing "DefaultAzureCredential" from the Azure Identity library to acquire an access token. This mode attempts to use these credential types to acquire an access token in the following order:

  • EnvironmentCredential
    • Enables authentication with Microsoft Entra ID using client and secret, or username and password, details configured in the following environment variables: AZURE_TENANT_ID, AZURE_CLIENT_ID, AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET, AZURE_CLIENT_CERTIFICATE_PATH, AZURE_USERNAME, AZURE_PASSWORD (More details)
  • ManagedIdentityCredential
    • Attempts authentication with Microsoft Entra ID using a managed identity that has been assigned to the deployment environment. The "Client Id" of a "user-assigned managed identity" is read from the "User Id" connection property.
  • SharedTokenCacheCredential
    • Authenticates using tokens in the local cache shared between Microsoft applications.
  • VisualStudioCredential
    • Enables authentication with Microsoft Entra ID using data from Visual Studio
  • VisualStudioCodeCredential
    • Enables authentication with Microsoft Entra ID using data from Visual Studio Code.
  • AzureCliCredential
    • Enables authentication with Microsoft Entra ID using Azure CLI to obtain an access token.

InteractiveBrowserCredential is disabled in the driver implementation of "Active Directory Default", and "Active Directory Interactive" is the only option available to acquire a token using MFA/Interactive authentication.*

Further customization options are not available at the moment.

Custom master key store provider registration enhancements

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient now offers more control of where master key store providers are accessible in an application to better support multi-tenant applications and their use of column encryption/decryption. The following APIs are introduced to allow registration of custom master key store providers on instances of SqlConnection and SqlCommand:

public class SqlConnection
{
    public void RegisterColumnEncryptionKeyStoreProvidersOnConnection(IDictionary<string, SqlColumnEncryptionKeyStoreProvider> customProviders)
}
public class SqlCommand 
{
    public void RegisterColumnEncryptionKeyStoreProvidersOnCommand(IDictionary<string, SqlColumnEncryptionKeyStoreProvider> customProviders)
}

The static API on SqlConnection, SqlConnection.RegisterColumnEncryptionKeyStoreProviders, used to register custom master key store providers globally, continues to be supported. The column encryption key cache maintained globally only applies to globally registered providers.

Column master key store provider registration precedence

The built-in column master key store providers that are available for the Windows Certificate Store, CNG Store and CSP are preregistered. No providers should be registered on the connection or command instances if one of the built-in column master key store providers is needed.

Custom master key store providers can be registered with the driver at three different layers. The global level is as it currently is. The new per-connection and per-command level registrations are empty initially and can be set more than once.

The precedences of the three registrations are as follows:

  • The per-command registration is checked if it isn't empty.
  • If the per-command registration is empty, the per-connection registration is checked if it isn't empty.
  • If the per-connection registration is empty, the global registration is checked.

Once any key store provider is found at a registration level, the driver does NOT fall back to the other registrations to search for a provider. If providers are registered but the proper provider isn't found at a level, an exception is thrown containing only the registered providers in the registration checked.

Column encryption key cache precedence

The driver doesn't cache the column encryption keys (CEKs) for custom key store providers registered using the new instance-level APIs. The key store providers need to implement their own cache to gain performance. The driver disables the local cache of column encryption keys implemented by custom key store providers if the key store provider instance is registered in the driver at the global level.

A new API has also been introduced on the SqlColumnEncryptionKeyStoreProvider base class to set the cache time to live:

public abstract class SqlColumnEncryptionKeyStoreProvider
{
    // The default value of Column Encryption Key Cache Time to Live is 0.
    // Provider's local cache is disabled for globally registered providers.
    // Custom key store provider implementation must include column encryption key cache to provide caching support to locally registered providers.
    public virtual TimeSpan? ColumnEncryptionKeyCacheTtl { get; set; } = new TimeSpan(0);
}

IP Address preference

A new connection property IPAddressPreference is introduced to specify the IP address family preference to the driver when establishing TCP connections. If Transparent Network IP Resolution (in .NET Framework) or Multi Subnet Failover is set to true, this setting has no effect. There are the three accepted values for this property:

  • IPv4First

    • This value is the default. The driver uses resolved IPv4 addresses first. If none of them can be connected to successfully, it tries resolved IPv6 addresses.
  • IPv6First

    • The driver uses resolved IPv6 addresses first. If none of them can be connected to successfully, it tries resolved IPv4 addresses.
  • UsePlatformDefault

    • The driver tries IP addresses in the order received from the DNS resolution response.

3.0 Target Platform Support

  • .NET Framework 4.6.1+ (Windows x86, Windows x64)
  • .NET Core 2.1+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows ARM, Linux, macOS)
  • .NET Standard 2.0+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows ARM, Linux, macOS)

Release notes for Microsoft.Data.SqlClient 2.1

Full release notes, including dependencies, are available in the GitHub Repository: 2.1 Release Notes.

New features in 2.1

Cross-Platform support for Always Encrypted

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient v2.1 extends support for Always Encrypted on the following platforms:

Support Always Encrypted Support Always Encrypted with Secure Enclave Target Framework Microsoft.Data.SqlClient Version Operating System
Yes Yes .NET Framework 4.6+ 1.1.0+ Windows
Yes Yes .NET Core 2.1+ 2.1.0+1 Windows, Linux, macOS
Yes No2 .NET Standard 2.0 2.1.0+ Windows, Linux, macOS
Yes Yes .NET Standard 2.1+ 2.1.0+ Windows, Linux, macOS

Note

1 Before Microsoft.Data.SqlClient version v2.1, Always Encrypted is only supported on Windows. 2 Always Encrypted with secure enclaves is not supported on .NET Standard 2.0.

Microsoft Entra Device Code Flow authentication

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient v2.1 provides support for "Device Code Flow" authentication with MSAL.NET. Reference documentation: OAuth2.0 Device Authorization Grant flow

Connection string example:

Server=<server>.database.windows.net; Authentication=Active Directory Device Code Flow; Database=Northwind;Encrypt=True

The following API enables customization of the Device Code Flow callback mechanism:

public class ActiveDirectoryAuthenticationProvider
{
    // For .NET Framework, .NET Core and .NET Standard targeted applications
    public void SetDeviceCodeFlowCallback(Func<DeviceCodeResult, Task> deviceCodeFlowCallbackMethod)
}

Microsoft Entra managed identity authentication

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient v2.1 introduces support for Microsoft Entra authentication using managed identities.

The following authentication mode keywords are supported:

  • Active Directory Managed Identity
  • Active Directory MSI (for cross MS SQL drivers compatibility)

Connection string examples:

// For System Assigned Managed Identity
"Server={serverURL}; Authentication=Active Directory MSI; Encrypt=True; Initial Catalog={db};"

// For System Assigned Managed Identity
"Server={serverURL}; Authentication=Active Directory Managed Identity; Initial Catalog={db};"

// For User Assigned Managed Identity
"Server={serverURL}; Authentication=Active Directory MSI; Encrypt=True; User Id={ObjectIdOfManagedIdentity}; Initial Catalog={db};"

// For User Assigned Managed Identity
"Server={serverURL}; Authentication=Active Directory Managed Identity; Encrypt=True; User Id={ObjectIdOfManagedIdentity}; Initial Catalog={db};"

Microsoft Entra Interactive authentication enhancements

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient v2.1 adds the following APIs to customize the Microsoft Entra Interactive authentication experience:

public class ActiveDirectoryAuthenticationProvider
{
    // For .NET Framework targeted applications only
    public void SetIWin32WindowFunc(Func<IWin32Window> iWin32WindowFunc);

    // For .NET Standard targeted applications only
    public void SetParentActivityOrWindowFunc(Func<object> parentActivityOrWindowFunc);

    // For .NET Framework, .NET Core and .NET Standard targeted applications
    public void SetAcquireAuthorizationCodeAsyncCallback(Func<Uri, Uri, CancellationToken, Task<Uri>> acquireAuthorizationCodeAsyncCallback);

    // For .NET Framework, .NET Core and .NET Standard targeted applications
    public void ClearUserTokenCache();
}

SqlClientAuthenticationProviders configuration section

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient v2.1 introduces a new configuration section, SqlClientAuthenticationProviders (a clone of the existing SqlAuthenticationProviders). The existing configuration section, SqlAuthenticationProviders, is still supported for backwards compatibility when the appropriate type is defined.

The new section allows application config files to contain both a SqlAuthenticationProviders section for System.Data.SqlClient and a SqlClientAuthenticationProviders section for Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.

Microsoft Entra authentication using an application client ID

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient v2.1 introduces support for passing a user-defined application client ID to the Microsoft Authentication Library. Application Client ID is used when authenticating with Microsoft Entra ID.

The following new APIs are introduced:

  1. A new constructor has been introduced in ActiveDirectoryAuthenticationProvider:
    [Applies to all .NET Platforms (.NET Framework, .NET Core, and .NET Standard)]

    public ActiveDirectoryAuthenticationProvider(string applicationClientId)
    

    Usage:

    string APP_CLIENT_ID = "<GUID>";
    SqlAuthenticationProvider customAuthProvider = new ActiveDirectoryAuthenticationProvider(APP_CLIENT_ID);
    SqlAuthenticationProvider.SetProvider(SqlAuthenticationMethod.ActiveDirectoryInteractive, customAuthProvider);
    
    using (SqlConnection sqlConnection = new SqlConnection("<connection_string>")
    {
        sqlConnection.Open();
    }
    
  2. A new configuration property has been introduced under SqlAuthenticationProviderConfigurationSection and SqlClientAuthenticationProviderConfigurationSection:
    [Applies to .NET Framework and .NET Core]

    internal class SqlAuthenticationProviderConfigurationSection : ConfigurationSection
    {
        ...
        [ConfigurationProperty("applicationClientId", IsRequired = false)]
        public string ApplicationClientId => this["applicationClientId"] as string;
    }
    
    // Inheritance
    internal class SqlClientAuthenticationProviderConfigurationSection : SqlAuthenticationProviderConfigurationSection
    { ... }
    

    Usage:

    <configuration>
        <configSections>
            <section name="SqlClientAuthenticationProviders"
                             type="Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SqlClientAuthenticationProviderConfigurationSection, Microsoft.Data.SqlClient" />
        </configSections>
        <SqlClientAuthenticationProviders applicationClientId ="<GUID>" />
    </configuration>
    
    <!--or-->
    
    <configuration>
        <configSections>
            <section name="SqlAuthenticationProviders"
                             type="Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SqlAuthenticationProviderConfigurationSection, Microsoft.Data.SqlClient" />
        </configSections>
        <SqlAuthenticationProviders applicationClientId ="<GUID>" />
    </configuration>
    

Data Classification v2 support

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient v2.1 introduces support for Data Classification's "Sensitivity Rank" information. The following new APIs are now available:

public class SensitivityClassification
{
    public SensitivityRank SensitivityRank;
}

public class SensitivityProperty
{
    public SensitivityRank SensitivityRank;
}

public enum SensitivityRank
{
    NOT_DEFINED = -1,
    NONE = 0,
    LOW = 10,
    MEDIUM = 20,
    HIGH = 30,
    CRITICAL = 40
}

Server Process ID for an active SqlConnection

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient v2.1 introduces a new SqlConnection property, ServerProcessId, on an active connection.

public class SqlConnection
{
    // Returns the server process Id (SPID) of the active connection.
    public int ServerProcessId;
}

Trace Logging support in Native SNI

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient v2.1 extends the existing SqlClientEventSource implementation to enable event tracing in SNI.dll. Events must be captured using a tool like Xperf.

Tracing can be enabled by sending a command to SqlClientEventSource as illustrated:

// Enables trace events:
EventSource.SendCommand(eventSource, (EventCommand)8192, null);

// Enables flow events:
EventSource.SendCommand(eventSource, (EventCommand)16384, null);

// Enables both trace and flow events:
EventSource.SendCommand(eventSource, (EventCommand)(8192 | 16384), null);

"Command Timeout" connection string property

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient v2.1 introduces the "Command Timeout" connection string property to override the default of 30 seconds. The timeout for individual commands can be overridden using the CommandTimeout property on the SqlCommand.

Connection string examples:

"Server={serverURL}; Initial Catalog={db}; Encrypt=True; Integrated Security=true; Command Timeout=60"

Removal of symbols from Native SNI

With Microsoft.Data.SqlClient v2.1, we've removed the symbols introduced in v2.0.0 from Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SNI.runtime NuGet starting with v2.1.1. The public symbols are now published to Microsoft Symbols Server for tools like BinSkim that require access to public symbols.

Source-Linking of Microsoft.Data.SqlClient symbols

Starting with Microsoft.Data.SqlClient v2.1, Microsoft.Data.SqlClient symbols are source-linked and published to the Microsoft Symbols Server for an enhanced debugging experience without the need to download source code.

2.1 Target Platform Support

  • .NET Framework 4.6+ (Windows x86, Windows x64)
  • .NET Core 2.1+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows ARM, Linux, macOS)
  • .NET Standard 2.0+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows ARM, Linux, macOS)

Release notes for Microsoft.Data.SqlClient 2.0

Full release notes, including dependencies, are available in the GitHub Repository: 2.0 Release Notes.

Breaking changes in 2.0

  • The access modifier for the enclave provider interface SqlColumnEncryptionEnclaveProvider has been changed from public to internal.
  • Constants in the SqlClientMetaDataCollectionNames class have been updated to reflect changes in SQL Server.
  • The driver now performs Server Certificate validation when the target SQL Server enforces TLS encryption, which is the default for Azure connections.
  • SqlDataReader.GetSchemaTable() now returns an empty DataTable instead null.
  • The driver now performs decimal scale rounding to match SQL Server behavior. For backwards compatibility, the previous behavior of truncation can be enabled using an AppContext switch.
  • For .NET Framework applications consuming Microsoft.Data.SqlClient, the SNI.dll files previously downloaded to the bin\x64 and bin\x86 folders are now named Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SNI.x64.dll and Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SNI.x86.dll and are downloaded to the bin directory.
  • New connection string property synonyms replace old properties when fetching connection string from SqlConnectionStringBuilder for consistency. Read More

New features in 2.0

The following new features have been introduced in Microsoft.Data.SqlClient 2.0.

DNS failure resiliency

The driver now caches IP addresses from every successful connection to a SQL Server endpoint that supports the feature. If a DNS resolution failure occurs during a connection attempt, the driver tries establishing a connection using a cached IP address for that server, if any exists.

EventSource tracing

This release introduces support for capturing event trace logs for debugging applications. To capture these events, client applications must listen for events from SqlClient's EventSource implementation:

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.EventSource

For more information, see how to Enable event tracing in SqlClient.

Enabling managed networking on Windows

A new AppContext switch, "Switch.Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.UseManagedNetworkingOnWindows", enables the use of a managed SNI implementation on Windows for testing and debugging purposes. This switch toggles the driver's behavior to use a managed SNI in .NET Core 2.1+ and .NET Standard 2.0+ projects on Windows, eliminating all dependencies on native libraries for the Microsoft.Data.SqlClient library.

AppContext.SetSwitch("Switch.Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.UseManagedNetworkingOnWindows", true);

See AppContext Switches in SqlClient for a full list of available switches in the driver.

Enabling decimal truncation behavior

The driver rounds the decimal data scale, by default, as is done by SQL Server. For backwards compatibility, you can set the AppContext switch "Switch.Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.TruncateScaledDecimal" to true.

AppContext.SetSwitch("Switch.Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.TruncateScaledDecimal", true);

New connection string property synonyms

New synonyms have been added for the following existing connection string properties to avoid spacing confusion around properties with more than one word. Old property names continue to be supported for backwards compatibility. But the new connection string properties are now included when fetching the connection string from SqlConnectionStringBuilder.

Existing connection string property New Synonym
ApplicationIntent Application Intent
ConnectRetryCount Connect Retry Count
ConnectRetryInterval Connect Retry Interval
PoolBlockingPeriod Pool Blocking Period
MultipleActiveResultSets Multiple Active Result Sets
MultiSubnetFailover Multiple Subnet Failover
TransparentNetworkIPResolution Transparent Network IP Resolution
TrustServerCertificate Trust Server Certificate

SqlBulkCopy RowsCopied property

The RowsCopied property provides read-only access to the number of rows that have been processed in the ongoing bulk copy operation. This value may not necessarily be equal to the final number of rows added to the destination table.

Connection open overrides

The default behavior of SqlConnection.Open() can be overridden to disable the ten-second delay and automatic connection retries triggered by transient errors.

using SqlConnection sqlConnection = new SqlConnection("Data Source=(local);Integrated Security=true;Initial Catalog=AdventureWorks;");
sqlConnection.Open(SqlConnectionOverrides.OpenWithoutRetry);

Note

Note that this override can only be applied to SqlConnection.Open() and not SqlConnection.OpenAsync().

Username support for Active Directory Interactive mode

A username can be specified in the connection string when using Microsoft Entra Interactive authentication mode for both .NET Framework and .NET Core

Set a username using the User ID or UID connection string property:

"Server=<server name>; Database=<db name>; Authentication=Active Directory Interactive; User Id=<username>;Encrypt=True;"

Order hints for SqlBulkCopy

Order hints can be provided to improve performance for bulk copy operations on tables with clustered indexes. For more information, see the bulk copy operations section.

SNI dependency changes

Microsoft.Data.SqlClient (.NET Core and .NET Standard) on Windows is now dependent on Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SNI.runtime, replacing the previous dependency on runtime.native.System.Data.SqlClient.SNI. The new dependency adds support for the ARM platform along with the already supported platforms ARM64, x64, and x86 on Windows.

2.0 Target Platform Support

  • .NET Framework 4.6+ (Windows x86, Windows x64)
  • .NET Core 2.1+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows ARM, Linux, macOS)
  • .NET Standard 2.0+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Windows ARM64, Windows ARM, Linux, macOS)

Release notes for Microsoft.Data.SqlClient 1.1.0

Full release notes, including dependencies, are available in the GitHub Repository: 1.1 Release Notes.

New features in 1.1

Always Encrypted with secure enclaves

Always Encrypted is available starting in Microsoft SQL Server 2016. Secure enclaves are available starting in Microsoft SQL Server 2019. To use the enclave feature, connection strings should include the required attestation protocol and attestation URL. For example:

"Attestation Protocol=HGS;Enclave Attestation Url=<attestation_url_for_HGS>"

For more information, see:

1.1 Target Platform Support

  • .NET Framework 4.6+ (Windows x86, Windows x64)
  • .NET Core 2.1+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Linux, macOS)
  • .NET Standard 2.0+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Linux, macOS)

Release notes for Microsoft.Data.SqlClient 1.0

The initial release for the Microsoft.Data.SqlClient namespace offers more functionality over the existing System.Data.SqlClient namespace.

Full release notes, including dependencies, are available in the GitHub Repository: 1.0 Release Notes.

New features in 1.0

New features over .NET Framework 4.7.2 System.Data.SqlClient

  • Data Classification - Available in Azure SQL Database and Microsoft SQL Server 2019.

  • UTF-8 support - Available in Microsoft SQL Server 2019.

New features over .NET Core 2.2 System.Data.SqlClient

  • Data Classification - Available in Azure SQL Database and Microsoft SQL Server 2019.

  • UTF-8 support - Available in Microsoft SQL Server 2019.

  • Authentication - Active Directory Password authentication mode.

Data Classification

Data Classification brings a new set of APIs exposing read-only Data Sensitivity and Classification information about objects retrieved via SqlDataReader when the underlying source supports the feature and contains metadata about data sensitivity and classification. See the sample application at Data Discovery and Classification in SqlClient.

public class SqlDataReader
{
    public Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.DataClassification.SensitivityClassification SensitivityClassification
}

namespace Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.DataClassification
{
    public class ColumnSensitivity
    {
        public System.Collections.ObjectModel.ReadOnlyCollection<Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.DataClassification.SensitivityProperty> SensitivityProperties
    }
    public class InformationType
    {
        public string Id
        public string Name
    }
    public class Label
    {
        public string Id
        public string Name
    }
    public class SensitivityClassification
    {
        public System.Collections.ObjectModel.ReadOnlyCollection<Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.DataClassification.ColumnSensitivity> ColumnSensitivities
        public System.Collections.ObjectModel.ReadOnlyCollection<Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.DataClassification.InformationType> InformationTypes
        public System.Collections.ObjectModel.ReadOnlyCollection<Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.DataClassification.Label> Labels
    }
    public class SensitivityProperty
    {
        public Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.DataClassification.InformationType InformationType
        public Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.DataClassification.Label Label
    }
}

UTF-8 support

UTF-8 support doesn't require any application code changes. These SqlClient changes optimize client-server communication when the server supports UTF-8 and the underlying column collation is UTF-8. See the UTF-8 section under What's new in SQL Server 2019.

Always encrypted with secure enclaves

In general, existing documentation that uses System.Data.SqlClient on .NET Framework and built-in column master key store providers should now work with .NET Core, too.

Develop using Always Encrypted with .NET Framework Data Provider

Always Encrypted: Protect sensitive data and store encryption keys in the Windows certificate store

Authentication

Different authentication modes can be specified by using the Authentication connection string option. For more information, see the documentation for SqlAuthenticationMethod.

Note

Custom key store providers, like the Azure Key Vault provider, will need to be updated to support Microsoft.Data.SqlClient. Similarly, enclave providers will also need to be updated to support Microsoft.Data.SqlClient. Always Encrypted is only supported against .NET Framework and .NET Core targets. It is not supported against .NET Standard since .NET Standard is missing certain encryption dependencies.

1.0 Target Platform Support

  • .NET Framework 4.6+ (Windows x86, Windows x64)
  • .NET Core 2.1+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Linux, macOS)
  • .NET Standard 2.0+ (Windows x86, Windows x64, Linux, macOS)