Versioning - .NET SDK feature guide
This page shows how to do the following:
- Use the .NET SDK Patching API
- Patching in new code
- Understanding deprecated Patches in the .NET SDK
- Safe Deployment of PostPatchActivity
Introduction to Versioning
Because we design for potentially long running Workflows at scale, versioning with Temporal works differently. We explain more in this optional 30 minute introduction:
Use the .NET SDK Patching API
How to use the .NET SDK Patching API using the Temporal .NET SDK
In principle, the .NET SDK's patching mechanism operates similarly to other SDKs in a "feature-flag" fashion. However, the "versioning" API now uses the concept of "patching in" code.
To understand this, you can break it down into three steps, which reflect three stages of migration:
- Running
PrePatchActivity
code while concurrently patching inPostPatchActivity
. - Running
PostPatchActivity
code with deprecation markers formy-patch
patches. - Running only the
PostPatchActivity
code.
Let's walk through this process in sequence.
Suppose you have an initial Workflow version called PrePatchActivity
:
[Workflow]
public class MyWorkflow
{
[WorkflowRun]
public async Task RunAsync()
{
this.result = await Workflow.ExecuteActivityAsync(
(MyActivities a) => a.PrePatchActivity(),
new() { StartToCloseTimeout = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(5) });
// ...
}
}
Now, you want to update your code to run PostPatchActivity
instead. This represents your desired end state.
[Workflow]
public class MyWorkflow
{
[WorkflowRun]
public async Task RunAsync()
{
this.result = await Workflow.ExecuteActivityAsync(
(MyActivities a) => a.PostPatchActivity(),
new() { StartToCloseTimeout = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(5) });
// ...
}
}
Problem: You cannot deploy PostPatchActivity
directly until you're certain there are no more running Workflows created using the PrePatchActivity
code, otherwise you are likely to cause a non-deterministic error.
Instead, you'll need to deploy PostPatchActivity
and use the Patched method to determine which version of the code to execute.
Implementing patching involves three steps:
- Use Patched to patch in new code and run it alongside the old code.
- Remove the old code and apply DeprecatePatch.
- Once you're confident that all old Workflows have finished executing, remove
DeprecatePatch
.
Patching in new code
Using Patched
inserts a marker into the Workflow History.
During replay, if a Worker encounters a history with that marker, it will fail the Workflow task when the Workflow code doesn't produce the same patch marker (in this case, my-patch
). This ensures you can safely deploy code from PostPatchActivity
as a "feature flag" alongside the original version (PrePatchActivity
).
[Workflow]
public class MyWorkflow
{
[WorkflowRun]
public async Task RunAsync()
{
if (Workflow.Patched("my-patch"))
{
this.result = await Workflow.ExecuteActivityAsync(
(MyActivities a) => a.PostPatchActivity(),
new() { StartToCloseTimeout = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(5) });
}
else
{
this.result = await Workflow.ExecuteActivityAsync(
(MyActivities a) => a.PrePatchActivity(),
new() { StartToCloseTimeout = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(5) });
}
// ...
}
}
Understanding deprecated Patches in the .NET SDK
After ensuring that all Workflows started with PrePatchActivity
code have finished, you can deprecate the patch.
Deprecated patches serve as a bridge between PrePatchActivity
and PostPatchActivity
. They function similarly to regular patches by adding a marker to the Workflow History. However, this marker won't cause a replay failure when the Workflow code doesn't produce it.
If, during the deployment of PostPatchActivity
, there are still live Workers running PrePatchActivity
code and these Workers pick up Workflow histories generated by PostPatchActivity
, they will safely use the patched branch.
[Workflow]
public class MyWorkflow
{
[WorkflowRun]
public async Task RunAsync()
{
Workflow.DeprecatePatch("my-patch")
this.result = await Workflow.ExecuteActivityAsync(
(MyActivities a) => a.PostPatchActivity(),
new() { StartToCloseTimeout = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(5) });
// ...
}
}
Safe Deployment of PostPatchActivity
You can safely deploy PostPatchActivity
once all Workflows labeled my-patch or earlier are finished, based on the previously mentioned assertion.
[Workflow]
public class MyWorkflow
{
[WorkflowRun]
public async Task RunAsync()
{
this.result = await Workflow.ExecuteActivityAsync(
(MyActivities a) => a.PostPatchActivity(),
new() { StartToCloseTimeout = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(5) });
// ...
}
}