Chapter 28: Database Transactions in C#
BEGIN, COMMIT, ROLLBACK for data integrity. In this chapter, you will learn database transactions in depth with C# code examples, explanations, and best practices.
Overview
This chapter covers database transactions for Kungfu.js developers using C#. We will start with the basics, move through practical examples, and end with advanced techniques and common pitfalls.
Why This Matters
Understanding database transactions is essential because it is a core part of building web applications. Every real-world app needs to handle begin, commit, rollback for data integrity. Skipping this chapter would leave a gap in your knowledge that would cause problems later.
Code Example
Here is how to work with databases in C#:
db.transaction(|tx| async move {
tx.execute(
"INSERT INTO users (email) VALUES ($1)",
&[json!("alice@example.com")]
).await?;
tx.execute(
"INSERT INTO logs (msg) VALUES ($1)",
&[json!("user created")]
).await?;
Ok(()) // commits
}).await?; // if this returns Err, ROLLBACK is automatic
How the ORM Works
The Kungfu.js ORM uses parameterized queries. This means user input never gets interpolated into SQL strings. Instead, placeholders like $1, $2 are used, and the actual values are passed separately. This makes SQL injection impossible.
For example, if you search for a user by email, the ORM generates: SELECT * FROM users WHERE email = $1 and passes the email value as a parameter. Even if the email contains SQL code like ' OR 1=1 --, it is treated as a plain string, not as SQL.
Common Mistakes
- Not reading the documentation: Always check the API reference when something does not work as expected.
- Skipping security: Never disable the default middleware unless you have a very good reason. Security is not optional.
- Not testing: Write tests for your handlers. Kungfu.js makes this easy with the built-in test utilities.
Summary
In this chapter, you learned about database transactions in C#. You saw code examples, understood how things work under the hood, and learned about common mistakes to avoid.
What is Next?
In chapter 29, we will cover Database Migrations: Generate and apply schema changes.