 Hi, welcome back to redhatloves.net. This is Don Shank with Red Hat. Today I want to talk about the ASPnet Music Store application. It's kind of a sample app to use to show off what you can do with .NET Core. It uses entity framework. It uses SQL Server if you're in Windows. If you're running like in Mono or .NET Core, it uses in-memory database. Here's the website ASPnet slash Music Store inside of GitHub. You can see it references like DNX. The readme is dated, I guess. We're going to run this on .NET Core 1.0. The first thing we're going to do is clone it. Well, the first thing you do is fork it. I forked it to my repo and I'm going to clone it. It's there. If you do an LSE, you see the music store. If you go into it, there's a source directory. I'll just show you. You go into source. There's a standalone and there's a music store. To be honest, I haven't even looked at this standalone. The music store one is the one I want. That's the web app. I can run a .NET restore. That should be pretty interesting because it's going to .NET restore. That's going to pull down all the assemblies I need from Nougat. But you'll see what'll happen. It's not going to work. Spoiler alert. Because it's looking for some RC3 stuff. We want just RC2. Watch this. Get tag list. You can see there is an RC2 release. Get checkout. If you specify the tags, 1.0.0.rc2. Now we have the RC2. Now if I do .NET restore, it should work. It's going to pull down just the RC2 pieces, DLLs. That works fine. Now you can do a build. Watch this. When you do a build, it looks at your project.json and gets all the information it needs for the build. You can see the red, the errors. I'll show you what that is. It tried to do a build for version 451 of the framework and that's for Windows. It did successfully do the build for the .NET core. There's a way to get around that though. You can do this. You can specify just the framework you want. .NET core app 1.0 and it will only do the build for that one. Of course it skipped it because it previously did it, but that's how you get around those errors. Then you can just do a .NET run and music store should start up. That's the easy part. The slow part is when you go over here the first time you hit the page because it has to fire up. We go to localhost 5000. We need about five or six seconds for the server to get started, the web server application. There it is. That's the music store. Running in Rail, that's pretty easy. We'll cancel out of that. The next video I'll do, we'll open that within Visual Studio Code and do some debugging. That's it for now. Thanks.