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Neo4j .NET Driver

This is the official Neo4j .NET driver for connecting to Neo4j 3.0.0+ databases via in-house binary protocol Bolt.

Resources to get you started:

For Application Developers

This section is prepared for application developers who would like to use this driver in appliation projects for connecting to a Neo4j instance or a Neo4j cluster.

Getting the Driver

The Neo4j Driver is distributed exclusively via Nuget.

Add the driver to your project using the Nuget Package Manager:

PM> Install-Package Neo4j.Driver

There is also a strong named version of the driver available on Nuget as Neo4j.Driver.Signed. Both packages contain the same version of the driver, only the latter is strong named. Consider using the strong named version only if your project is strong named and/or you are forced to use strong named dependencies.

Add the strong named version of the driver to your project using the Nuget Package Manager:

PM> Install-Package Neo4j.Driver.Signed

Minimum Viable Snippet

Connect to a Neo4j database

IDriver driver = GraphDatabase.Driver("bolt://localhost:7687", AuthTokens.Basic("username", "pasSW0rd"));
using(ISession session = driver.Session())
{
    IStatementResult result = session.Run("CREATE (n) RETURN n");
}
driver.Dispose();

There are a few points that need to be highlighted when adding this driver into your project:

  • Each IDriver instance maintains a pool of connections inside, as a result, it is recommended to only use one driver per application.
  • It is considerably cheap to create new sessions and transactions, as sessions and transactions do not create new connections as long as there are free connections available in the connection pool.
  • The driver is thread-safe, while the session or the transaction is not thread-safe.

Parsing Result Values

Record Stream

A cypher execution result is comprised of a stream records followed by a result summary. The records inside the result are accessible via IEnumerable interface on IStatementResult. Our recommended way to access these result records is to make use of Linq methods such as Single, ToList, Select.

Process result records using Linq:

IStatementResult result = tx.Run("MATCH (a:Person) RETURN a.name as name");
List<string> people = result.Select(record => record["name"].As<string>()).ToList();

The records are exposed as a record stream in the sense that:

  • A record is accessible once it is received by the client. It is not needed for the whole result set to be received before it can be visited.
  • Each record can only be visited (a.k.a. consumed) once.

For example, given a record stream in a result:

Keys "name"
Record 0 "Bruce Wayne"
Record 1 "Selina Kyle"

Visiting the record stream when consumed as IEnumerable (i.e. if not converted to List or Array):

result.First(); // Bruce Wayne
result.First(); // Selina Kyle as you already consumed the previous "first" record!

Value Types

The driver currently exposes values in the record in the record as of object type. The underlying types of the returned values depend on the corresponding Cypher types.

The mapping between Cypher types and the types used by this driver (to represent the Cypher type):

Cypher Type Driver Type
null null
List IList< object >
Map IDictionary<string, object>
Boolean boolean
Integer long
Float float
String string
ByteArray byte[]
Point Point
Node INode
Relationship IRelationship
Path IPath

To convert from object to the driver type, a helper method ValueExtensions#As<T> is available:

IRecord record = result.First();
string name = record["name"].As<string>();

Temporal Types - Date and Time

The new temporal types in Neo4j 3.4 series are introduced with the 1.6 series of the driver. Considering the nanosecond precision and large range of supported values, all temporal types are backed by custom types at the driver level.

The mapping among the Cypher temporal types, driver types, and convertible CLR temporal types - DateTime, TimeSpan and DateTimeOffset - (via IConvertible interface) are as follows:

Cypher Type Driver Type Convertible CLR Type
Date LocalDate DateTime
Time OffsetTime ---
LocalTime LocalTime TimeSpan, DateTime
DateTime ZonedDateTime DateTimeOffset
LocalDateTime LocalDateTime DateTime
Duration Duration ---

Receiving a temporal value as driver type:

IRecord record = result.Single();
ZonedDateTime datetime = record["datetime"].As<ZonedDateTime>();

Converting a temporal value to the CLR type:

object record = result.Single()["datetime"];

DateTimeOffset datetime = record["datetime"].As<DateTimeOffset>();
// which is equivalent to
// ZonedDateTime cyDatetime = record["datetime"].As<ZonedDateTime>();
// DateTimeOffset datetime = cyDatetime.ToDateTimeOffset();

Note:

  • The conversion to CLR types is possible only when the value fits in the range of the target built-in type. A ValueOverflowException is thrown when the conversion is not possible.
  • The Cypher temporal types (excluding Date) provide nanosecond precision. However CLR types only support ticks (100 nanosecond) precision. So a temporal type created via Cypher might not be convertible to the CLR type (a ValueTruncationException is thrown when a conversion is requested in this case).
  • ZonedDateTime represents date and times with either offset or time zone information. Time zone names adhere to the IANA system, rather than the Windows system. Although there is no support for inbound time zone name conversions, a conversion from IANA system to Windows system may be necessary if a conversion to DateTimeOffset or an access to Offset is requested by the user. Unicode CLDR mapping is used for this conversion. Please bear in mind that Windows time zone database do not provide precise historical data, so you may end up with inaccurate DateTimeOffset values for past values. It is recommended that you use driver level temporal types to avoid these inaccuracies.

For Driver Developers

This section targets at people who would like to compile the source code on their own machines for the purpose of, for example, contributing a PR to this repository. Before contributing to this project, please take a few minutes and read our Contributing Criteria.

Snapshots

Snapshot builds are available at our MyGet feed, add the feed to your Nuget Sources to access snapshot artifacts.

Building the Source Code

Visual Studio Version

The driver is written in C# 7 so will require Visual Studio 2017.

Integration Tests

The integration tests use boltkit to download and install a database instance on your local machine. They can fail for three main reasons:

  1. Python.exe and Python scripts folder is not installed and added in the system PATH variable
  2. The tests aren't run as Administrator (you'll need to run Visual Studio as administrator)
  3. You have an instance of Neo4j already installed / running on your local machine.

The database installation uses boltkit neoctrl-install command to install the database. It is possible to run the integration tests against a specific version by setting environment variable NeoctrlArgs.

Run tests

The simplest way to run all tests from command line is to run runTests.ps1 powershell script:

.\Neo4j.Driver\runTests.ps1

Any parameter to this powershell script will be used to reset environment variable NeoctrlArgs:

.\Neo4j.Driver\runTests.ps1 -e 3.3.0

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Neo4j Bolt driver for .NET

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