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Neste guia de início rápido, você usará o exemplo Quickstart 1 SQL Authentication sample para executar o Data API builder (DAB) sobre SQL. Os usuários acessam o aplicativo Web anonimamente. O aplicativo Web acessa o DAB anonimamente. O DAB usa a autenticação SQL para se conectar a SQL Server ou SQL do Azure.
O exemplo expõe dados SQL por meio de REST, GraphQL e MCP. Ele também inclui a orquestração local do .NET Aspire e scripts de implantação do Azure.
Importante
A autenticação SQL mantém a configuração simples, mas usa credenciais armazenadas. Evite segredos inseridos na produção. Armazene segredos locais em .env, armazene segredos na nuvem em um repositório de segredos gerenciado e considere a identidade gerenciada para cargas de trabalho de produção.
Pré-requisitos
- .NET 8 ou posterior
- Área de Trabalho do Docker
- PowerShell
- ferramentas .NET Aspire para orquestração local
- CLI do Azure para implantação de Azure
- sqlpackage se você fizer a implantação do projeto de banco de dados
O que o exemplo mostra
- Um aplicativo Web estático que chama o DAB sem a entrada do usuário.
- DAB configurado como a única camada de API, GraphQL e MCP sobre SQL.
- Endpoints REST, GraphQL e MCP expostos a partir da mesma configuração do DAB.
- Autenticação SQL do DAB com o SQL Server local e o SQL do Azure no Azure.
- Orquestração do .NET Aspire para o SQL Server local, DAB, o aplicativo web, SQL Commander e MCP Inspector.
- Implantação do Azure com scripts do PowerShell em
azure-infra.
Fluxo de autenticação
| Hop | Authentication |
|---|---|
| Do usuário para o aplicativo web | Anônimo |
| Aplicativo Web para API | Anônimo |
| API para SQL local | Autenticação do SQL |
| API para SQL do Azure | Autenticação do SQL |
Comparar com a série
| Step | O que muda |
|---|---|
| Anterior | Usar o Data API builder com SQL cria endpoints REST e GraphQL locais com a CLI do DAB. |
| Este início rápido | Usa um aplicativo de exemplo completo e credenciais SQL para acesso do DAB ao SQL. |
| Próximo | Usar identidade gerenciada remove a necessidade da senha do SQL do Azure usando a identidade do Azure do DAB. |
Utilize o exemplo
Clone o repositório de exemplo.
git clone https://github.com/Azure-Samples/dab-2.0-quickstart-web_anon-api_anon-db_sql_auth.git
cd dab-2.0-quickstart-web_anon-api_anon-db_sql_auth
Execute o exemplo localmente.
dotnet tool restore
dotnet run --project aspire-apphost
O painel do Aspire é aberto em http://localhost:15888. O aplicativo Web é aberto em http://localhost:5173. Use o painel para inspecionar o endpoint do DAB, o contêiner do SQL Server, o MCP Inspector e os recursos do SQL Commander.
Implante o exemplo para Azure.
pwsh ./azure-infra/azure-up.ps1
O script de implantação provisiona recursos SQL do Azure e Aplicativos de Contêiner do Azure para DAB, o aplicativo Web, o Inspetor MCP e o Comandante do SQL.
Limpe os recursos do Azure quando terminar.
pwsh ./azure-infra/azure-down.ps1
Arquivos de chave
| Caminho | Purpose |
|---|---|
azure-infra |
Arquivos Bicep e scripts do PowerShell para implantação e limpeza do Azure. |
data-api/dab-config.json |
Configuração de runtime do DAB para SQL, REST, GraphQL, MCP e acesso de entidade anônima. |
database |
Projeto de banco de dados SQL, arquivos de esquema e scripts de dados iniciais. |
web-app |
Aplicativo Web estático que chama o DAB anonimamente. |
aspire-apphost |
.NET Aspire AppHost que orquestra contêineres locais e recursos de projeto. |
mcp-inspector |
Configuração de contêiner do MCP Inspector para testar ferramentas MCP do DAB. |
Use GitHub Copilot para recriar este exemplo
Abra o workspace no qual você deseja criar o exemplo em Visual Studio Code, alterne GitHub Copilot para o modo de agente e cole esse prompt.
You are GitHub Copilot running in agent mode. Recreate the Data API builder Quickstart 1 SQL Authentication sample as a complete, runnable project in the current VS Code workspace under `quickstart-01-sql-authentication`. Build a static web app, Data API builder (DAB), SQL Server locally, Azure SQL in Azure, REST, GraphQL, MCP, .NET Aspire local orchestration, SQL Commander, MCP Inspector, and Azure Container Apps deployment scripts. DAB is the only API, GraphQL, and MCP layer over SQL.
Source repository: https://github.com/Azure-Samples/dab-2.0-quickstart-web_anon-api_anon-db_sql_auth. If internet access is available, inspect or clone this repository before you create files. Reuse and adapt its files as closely as possible, especially `web-app/`, `data-api/`, `database/`, `aspire-apphost/`, `mcp-inspector/`, `azure-infra/`, scripts, and README patterns. The goal is to implement the published quickstart, not to invent a different sample. If the repository differs from this prompt or the current Data API builder docs, prefer the current docs for product behavior.
Minimize user interaction. Use the defaults in this prompt and make reasonable best guesses for noncritical choices. Do not ask for a root folder or project folder name; use the current VS Code workspace and the default subfolder. Ask only when you need approval for resource changes, secrets, permissions, materially higher cost, external account choices, or an ambiguous requirement that affects the architecture.
Start with a short plan and proceed with safe defaults before you create files or run commands. Ask only these questions if the values aren't already available from the environment or prior context:
- Which Azure subscription, primary region, fallback region, and resource group should Azure deployment use? Default fallback region: `westus2` if the primary region can't provision Azure SQL or Container Apps.
- Do you approve creating billable Azure resources if the deployment phase starts?
Use the default demo SQL Database Project unless the user asks for a simple SQL script. Generate a strong SQL password and store it only in local `.env` files or approved cloud secret stores. Use a conventional SQL admin user name such as `sqladmin` unless the target environment requires a different name.
After the answers, show a short checklist and ask for approval before implementation. Include phases for local scaffold, local validation, Azure infrastructure, Azure deployment, validation, and cleanup. Do not run any Azure command that creates or changes resources until the user explicitly approves the exact command set.
After approval, continue working without asking status-check questions. If a command, build, container, endpoint, or validation step fails, inspect the error, adjust the project, rerun the step, and continue. Keep iterating until the sample runs end-to-end or you hit a blocker that requires user action.
Use cost-first Azure defaults. Choose the cheapest option that satisfies the quickstart requirements: use a free Azure SQL database offer when the subscription and region support it; otherwise choose the lowest-cost SQL option that supports the scenario. Use Azure Container Apps consumption, minimal CPU and memory, Basic Azure Container Registry, minimal Log Analytics retention, and no always-on or dedicated plans unless required. Prioritize finishing the project. Treat regional provisioning limits as expected adjustment points, not failures: if the primary region can't provision a required service or free SQL option, use the approved fallback region such as `westus2`, and continue the deployment. Ask the user only when both the primary and fallback regions can't satisfy the requirements, when a change would materially increase cost, when a new permission is required, or when you need approval for Azure commands that create or change resources beyond the already-approved plan. Keep every resource minimal, but make the web interface neat and approachable: small code footprint, responsive layout, clear status messages, accessible labels, and simple styling that is polished rather than austere.
Verify prerequisites and report only missing items: .NET SDK, Docker Desktop running, PowerShell, Azure CLI, `sqlpackage`, .NET Aspire tooling, and the DAB CLI. If the DAB CLI is missing, install or restore it only after the user approves. Use the DAB CLI docs while building: https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/data-api-builder/command-line/.
Use these docs during implementation:
- DAB CLI reference: https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/data-api-builder/command-line/
- `dab init`: https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/data-api-builder/command-line/dab-init
- `dab add`: https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/data-api-builder/command-line/dab-add
- `dab validate`: https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/data-api-builder/command-line/dab-validate
- `dab start`: https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/data-api-builder/command-line/dab-start
- DAB MCP overview: https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/data-api-builder/mcp/overview
Create this structure under the sample folder:
- `azure-infra/` for Bicep, `azure-up.ps1`, `azure-down.ps1`, and post-provision scripts.
- `data-api/` for `dab-config.json` and a DAB Dockerfile that bakes the config into the image for Azure.
- `database/` for a SQL Database Project or idempotent SQL scripts with seed data.
- `web-app/` for static HTML, CSS, and JavaScript that calls DAB anonymously.
- `aspire-apphost/` for the .NET Aspire AppHost.
- `mcp-inspector/` for MCP Inspector notes or container assets.
Handle secrets first. Add `.env`, `**/bin`, and `**/obj` to `.gitignore` before writing secrets. Use `SQL_PASSWORD` for the SQL password and `MSSQL_CONNECTION_STRING` for the DAB connection string. Never print secret values. Use `@env('MSSQL_CONNECTION_STRING')` in `dab-config.json`.
Configure DAB CORS before you start or deploy the web app. Do not leave `runtime.host.cors.origins` as `[]`. Set it to include the exact web app origins, including scheme and port: the local Aspire web origin, such as `http://localhost:5173`, and the deployed Azure Container Apps web FQDN if Azure deployment is approved. Keep `allow-credentials` set to `false` unless the sample explicitly uses browser credentials or cookies. Direct REST, GraphQL, or Swagger requests can succeed even when the browser blocks JavaScript fetch calls, so browser-origin CORS must be configured and validated separately.
Use this DAB CLI workflow and validate after each config change:
```dotnetcli
dab init --database-type mssql --connection-string "@env('MSSQL_CONNECTION_STRING')" --host-mode Development --rest.enabled true --graphql.enabled true --mcp.enabled true
dab add Todos --source dbo.Todos --source.type table --permissions "anonymous:read" --mcp.dml-tools true
dab validate --config data-api/dab-config.json
dab start --config data-api/dab-config.json
```
Use this minimal DAB runtime shape if you write the config directly:
```json
{
"$schema": "https://dataapibuilder.azureedge.net/schemas/latest/dab.draft.schema.json",
"data-source": {
"database-type": "mssql",
"connection-string": "@env('MSSQL_CONNECTION_STRING')"
},
"runtime": {
"rest": { "enabled": true, "path": "/api" },
"graphql": { "enabled": true, "path": "/graphql" },
"mcp": { "enabled": true, "path": "/mcp" },
"host": { "mode": "development", "cors": { "origins": ["http://localhost:5173"], "allow-credentials": false } }
},
"entities": {}
}
```
Use these Aspire patterns from the quickstart skills:
```csharp
var sqlServer = builder.AddSqlServer("sql-server")
.WithEnvironment("ACCEPT_EULA", "Y")
.WithDataVolume("sql-data");
var sqlDatabase = sqlServer.AddDatabase("TodoDb");
var sqlDatabaseProject = builder.AddSqlProject<Projects.database>("sql-project")
.WithReference(sqlDatabase);
var dabServer = builder.AddContainer("data-api", "azure-databases/data-api-builder", "latest")
.WithImageRegistry("mcr.microsoft.com")
.WithBindMount(new FileInfo("data-api/dab-config.json").FullName, "/App/dab-config.json", isReadOnly: true)
.WithEnvironment("MSSQL_CONNECTION_STRING", sqlDatabase)
.WithHttpEndpoint(targetPort: 5000, name: "http")
.WithHttpHealthCheck("/health")
.WaitForCompletion(sqlDatabaseProject);
```
Use `.WaitForCompletion(sqlDatabaseProject)` for DAB and SQL Commander when a SQL project deploys schema. Do not use only `.WaitFor(sqlDatabaseProject)` for a run-to-completion SQL project.
Add SQL Commander exactly enough to work. Use image `jerrynixon/sql-commander:latest`, env var `ConnectionStrings__db`, and ensure the connection string includes `TrustServerCertificate=true`.
```csharp
var sqlCommander = builder.AddContainer("sql-cmdr", "jerrynixon/sql-commander", "latest")
.WithImageRegistry("docker.io")
.WithHttpEndpoint(targetPort: 8080, name: "http")
.WithEnvironment("ConnectionStrings__db", sqlDatabase)
.WithHttpHealthCheck("/health")
.WaitForCompletion(sqlDatabaseProject);
```
Add MCP Inspector exactly enough to work with DAB MCP over HTTP. Use Streamable HTTP transport and omit auth only for local development.
```csharp
var mcpInspector = builder.AddMcpInspector("mcp-inspector")
.WithMcpServer(dabServer, transportType: McpTransportType.StreamableHttp)
.WithEnvironment("DANGEROUSLY_OMIT_AUTH", "true")
.WaitFor(dabServer);
```
Also create a VS Code MCP example for local testing:
```json
{
"servers": {
"local-dab": { "type": "http", "url": "http://localhost:5000/mcp" }
}
}
```
For Azure, bake `dab-config.json` into the DAB image. Do not rely on volume mounts in Azure Container Apps.
```dockerfile
FROM mcr.microsoft.com/azure-databases/data-api-builder:latest
COPY dab-config.json /App/dab-config.json
```
Validate before reporting success:
- `dab validate --config data-api/dab-config.json` exits with code 0.
- `dotnet run --project aspire-apphost` starts the complete local environment.
- A direct database query confirms the seeded table exists and contains rows.
- DAB `/health` returns a 2xx response.
- A browser-origin request from each web app origin receives an `Access-Control-Allow-Origin` response header that matches that origin.
- REST returns seeded rows anonymously.
- GraphQL returns seeded rows anonymously.
- MCP Inspector can list DAB tools and call `describe_entities` or an equivalent DAB MCP tool.
- SQL Commander opens from the Aspire dashboard and shows the seeded table.
- The web site returns a successful HTTP response.
- The web app displays data anonymously.
- Azure Container Apps are healthy if deployment is approved.
Do not report final URLs, asset locations, or a success summary until you directly verify database connectivity and query results, a 2xx DAB health response, and a successful web site response. This validation ensures the sample works without requiring the developer to check.
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