Using Entity Framework with SQL Server many-to-many relations - c#

Do not know how to use the advanced features of displaying thing here, so please excuse ;-)
The database structure is
User --> UserOwnerR <-- Owner
Also I have several support structures (ex. addresses belonging to a specific owner).
I need to find all addresses to whom a specific user has access because it belongs to on/many owners, but not addresses to whom the user have a owner relation.

n:m relations can be realized without a join table in EF Core 5+.
public class User
{
// user properties
public IEnumerable<Owner> Owners { get; set; }
}
public class Owner
{
// owner properties
public IEnumerable<User> Users { get; set; }
}

You did not specify wether you’re using ef Code first approach (you generated your Schema based on c# classes) or database first approach (generate c# classes from database tables) or none of those (manually set up your entities).
If you are able to change your classes manually, you might add navigation properties. Those might look like this:
public class User
{
// whatever
public IEnumerable<UserOwnerR> userOwners { get; set; }
}
public class Owner
{
// whatever
public IEnumerable<UserOwnerR> userOwners { get; set; }
}
public class UserOwnerR
{
public virtual Owner owner { get; set; }
public virtual User user { get; set; }
}
Now you are able to place conditions while joining those tables together. Use the sql syntax based query option with linq, as it’s easier to connect your tables that way. You might want to take a look at Entity Framework Join 3 Tables to construct your individual query.

Related

Single object hierarchy, multiple backing databases in EF

I have these classes:
class User
{
public int Id { get; set; }
string Email { get; set; }
}
class Model1
{
Model2 Model2 { get; set }
Model3 Model3 { get; set }
User User { get; set; }
}
class Model2
{
User User2 { get; set; }
}
class Model3
{
User User3 { get; set; }
}
(In practice the Model hierarchy is deeper and has many other properties. The important thing is that the User class is referenced in several different places of the Model hierarchy.)
I am in the process of mapping this class hierarchy using EF. I am forced to use two distinct relational databases, a legacy "UserDB" which already maps the User class, but which I otherwise cannot touch; and a "ModelDB" which is under my control. Similarly, I can change the Model[123] but not the User class(es). Client code using Model[123] must have access to a User User property.
EF does not support inter-database joins. I tried to emulate one, like this: I added a int UserId field accompanying User User to all of Model[123], then marked User User as [NotMapped]. The question is when to resolve these ids into actual User objects. The options seem to be:
Manually fixup the Model hierarchy by traversing it and loading missing User User properties immediately after each EF query to ModernDB.
Make the User User properties lazy, and have them resolve upon first access.
Neither option seems good: Option (1) is error prone and repetitive; Option (2) introduces what should be asynchronous operations in calls that client code should be able to assume is asynchronous. (Also, I seemed to very easily introduce deadlocks when I tried.)
Does EF have a hook that allows me to run asynchronous code when an EF-entity is populated?
Is there a good way to emulate inter-database joins in EF?

Two separate applications, two databases, one IOC. How to share membership?

I am making a website and have two databases, one for my application, and another for an external application. By external, I mean it is an opensource application that I want to work with. The application is MVCForum
This external application already has membership integrated. It uses dependency injection (Unity) and uses Entity Framework. Obviously I don't want to destroy the project and would like to be able to have my application run alongside the MVCForum so that when/if it ever gets updated, I can run the updates without too much trouble and without it affecting my application.
So, here is the problem:
I have a MembershipUser class part of an application, call it externamApp.
namespace MVCForum.Domain.DomainModel
{
public partial class MembershipUser : Entity
{
public MembershipUser()
{
Id = GuidComb.GenerateComb();
}
public Guid Id { get; set; }
public string UserName { get; set; }
public virtual IList<MembershipRole> Roles { get; set; }
//I need to have this. A user has one or many trips
public virtual IList<Trip> Trips{ get; set; }
}
}
I also have my own app, let's call it myApp. Within my app, I have a class called Trip.
namespace MyApp.Domain.DomainModel.TripModels
{
public partial class Trip : Entity
{
public Trip()
{
Id = GuidComb.GenerateComb();
}
public Guid Id { get; set; }
public virtual MembershipUser User { get; set; }
public virtual TCCategory Category { get; set; }
}
}
As you can see, MembershipUser has a property:
public virtual IList<Trip> Trips{ get; set; }
This is because a user can have one to many trips...
You can also see that Trip has a property:
public virtual MembershipUser User { get; set; }
But, I would also like to have a user attached to my Trip class.
When Entity Framework pulls an object from the database, it links with that object all the sub-objects. For example, when it pulls out MembershipUser, it will have all the roles of that user attached - because of this property (and the mapping obviously):
public virtual IList<MembershipRole> Roles { get; set; }
I realize that this is a circular reference, but I am hoping someone with more knowledge can offer a good suggestion or perhaps even a solution.
Like you said and well you have a circular dependency, it is not good to have such dependencies and you should not create solutions with that kind of approach.
The first solution that comes to my mind is that you create a new project (a library) that contains information about your membership (I suggest you to go further and create a Data library containing all the data related classes), that way you can reference that project from both your applications and and avoid the circular dependency.

Entity Framework Code First Relationships; what am I missing?

I'm experimenting with EF5 Code First and I am using the models (show below).
When I look at the database that is created, I am confused because I do not see anything in the Track table that points to the Category table. Category has a FK pointing back to Track but that means that there are going to be duplicates of the categories?
A little background: I am trying to build a model that has tracks and every track can have 1 to N Categories. All of the categories are already defined, that is they are basically a lookup and I plan to create them in the seed method when database is created.
I think I am not understanding something obvious... When I query a track, how will I know what category it contains?
Thx
public class Track : IAuditInfo
{
public Int32 Id { get; set; }
public String Name { get; set; }
public String Description { get; set; }
public String Data { get; set; }
public DateTime CreatedOn { get; set; }
public DateTime ModifiedOn { get; set; }
public ICollection<Category> Categories { get; set; }
public Track()
{
Categories = new List<Category>();
}
}
public class Category
{
public Int32 Id { get; set; }
public Boolean IsVisible { get; set; }
public String DisplayName { get; set; }
}
Your current model is a one-to-many relationship between tracks and categories.
This usually implemented, as you have noted that entity framework does, using a foreign key on the many side (category) to the one side (track).
If I understand you correctly, what you want is a many-to-many relationship. Many tracks can be related to the same category, and a single track can belong to many categories.
To let entity framework understand that you want a many-to-many relationship you can simply add a ICollection property to your category class.
So both your classes should have a collection of the other class.
I.e. tracks have many categories and categories have many tracks.
For more information you can also see: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/data/hh134698.a.nospx
Olav is right, your data model at the moment is not telling Entity Framework that there is a many-to-many relationship in there.
The simplest way to resolve this is to add
public virtual ICollection<Track> Tracks { get; set; }
to your Category class.
However... You may not want to pollute your domain model with artefacts that are not relevant to your domain. More importantly, when you do it this way, it is up to Entity Framework to figure out what to call the binding table. Prior to EF6 this naming is non deterministic (see http://entityframework.codeplex.com/workitem/1677), which may mean that two different machines compiling the same code will decide on different names for that table and cause some interesting migration problems in your production system.
The answer to both problems is to always explicitly manage many-to-many relationships with Fluent Configuration.
In your Data Context class, override the OnModelCreating, something like this:
public class MyDb : DbContext
{
public IDbSet<Track> Tracks { get; set; }
protected override void OnModelCreating(DbModelBuilder modelBuilder)
{
modelBuilder.Entity<Track>()
.HasMany(t => t.Categories)
.WithMany()
.Map(c => c.ToTable("CategoriesForTracks"));
}
}
If you do this, you don't need to add a navigation property to your Category class, though you still can (if you do, you should use the overload for WithMany that allows you to specify a property).
Relationships between entities and how to map that to a relational database is inherently hard. For anything other than the simplest parent-child relationships you will want to use the fluent API to make sure you actually get what you want.
Morteza Manavi has a really good blog series describing relationships in EF Code First in exhaustive detail.
NOTE
You should usually make navigation properties virtual. So, you should change your Category class like this:
public virtual ICollection<Category> Categories { get; set; }
In theory, not making it virtual should just cause eager loading rather than lazy loading to happen. In practice I have always found lots of subtle bugs appearing when my navigation properties are not virtual.

How to store hierarchy in Entity Framework

Take a look at the following UI:
I am allowing the user, who owns an auto shop of some kind, to select what types of service his shop provides. There are 5 levels to my hierarchy and thousands of total entries. Selecting (checking) any skill area automatically selects all sub-areas or child areas. Each area has an ID which for the top level looks like 10000, the next level 11000, etc...
My questions:
How can I achieve this UI with one code base supporting mobile, tablet and desktop interfaces?
How can I represent the hierarchy using Entity Framework for populating the hierarchy as well as storing the user's selections?
The application is in ASP.Net MVC 4 using SimpleMembership.
The best way to have one code base supporting multiple platforms is to use ASP.NET MVC 4 WebAPI (JSON or XML) as a REST web service. You can find more about it here: http://www.asp.net/web-api
There are also a couple of ready-to-use parsers to deserialize the JSON/XML data into C# object on the client side.
Second question seems to be more related to the database schema behind the Entity Framework abstraction. In terms of EF probably the best way to organize your data is to have categories referencing other categories with the last category referencing the actual services. Are you familiar with the concept of database relations, foreign keys, etc?
Edit:
public class Category1{
public string Name { get; set; }
public virtual ICollection<Item> Items { get; set; }
}
public class Category2{
public string Name { get; set; }
public Category1 ParentCategory { get; set; }
public virtual ICollection<Item> Items { get; set; }
}
public class Item{
public string Name { get; set; }
public decimal Price { get; set; }
}
This is an example how would you write code-first EntityFramework objects. Category2 has a parent of type Category1 and both categories contain a collection of items. Pluralsight has an excellent course on EF code first which covers all the basics.

Entity Framework associations with multiple (separate) keys on view

I'm having problems setting up an Entity Framework 4 model.
A Contact object is exposed in the database as an updateable view. Also due to the history of the database, this Contact view has two different keys, one from a legacy system. So some other tables reference a contact with a 'ContactID' while other older tables reference it with a 'LegacyContactID'.
Since this is a view, there are no foreign keys in the database, and I'm trying to manually add associations in the designer. But the fluent associations don't seem to provide a way of specifying which field is referenced.
How do I build this model?
public class vwContact
{
public int KeyField { get; set; }
public string LegacyKeyField { get; set; }
}
public class SomeObject
{
public virtual vwContact Contact { get; set; }
public int ContactId { get; set; } //references vwContact.KeyField
}
public class LegacyObject
{
public virtual vwContact Contact { get; set; }
public string ContactId { get; set; } //references vwContact.LegacyKeyField
}
ModelCreatingFunction(modelBuilder)
{
// can't set both of these, right?
modelBuilder.Entity<vwContact>().HasKey(x => x.KeyField);
modelBuilder.Entity<vwContact>().HasKey(x => x.LegacyKeyField);
modelBuilder.Entity<LegacyObject>().HasRequired(x => x.Contact).???
//is there some way to say which key field this reference is referencing?
}
EDIT 2: "New things have come to light, man" - His Dudeness
After a but more experimentation and news, I found using a base class and child classes with different keys will not work by itself. With code first especially, base entities must define a key if they are not explicitly mapped to tables.
I left the suggested code below because I still recommend using the base class for your C# manageability, but I below the code I have updated my answer and provided other workaround options.
Unfortunately, the truth revealed is that you cannot accomplish what you seek without altering SQL due to limitations on EF 4.1+ code first.
Base Contact Class
public abstract class BaseContact
{
// Include all properties here except for the keys
// public string Name { get; set; }
}
Entity Classes
Set this up via the fluent API if you like, but for easy illustration I've used the data annotations
public class Contact : BaseContact
{
[Key]
public int KeyField { get; set; }
public string LegacyKeyField { get; set; }
}
public class LegacyContact : BaseContact
{
public int KeyField { get; set; }
[Key]
public string LegacyKeyField { get; set; }
}
Using the Entities
Classes that reference or manipulate the contact objects should reference the base class much like an interface:
public class SomeCustomObject
{
public BaseContact Contact { get; set; }
}
If later you need to programmatically determine what type you are working with use typeof() and manipulate the entity accordingly.
var co = new SomeCustomObject(); // assume its loaded with data
if(co.Contact == typeof(LegacyContact)
// manipulate accordingly.
New Options & Workarounds
As I suggested in comment before, you won't be able to map them to a single view/table anyway so you have a couple options:
a. map your objects to their underlying tables and alter your "get/read" methods on repositories and service classes pull from the joined view -or-
b. create a second view and map each object to their appropriate view.
c. map one entity to its underlying table and one to the view.
Summary
Try (B) first, creating a separate view because it requires the least amount of change to both code and DB schema (you aren't fiddling with underlying tables, or affecting stored procedures). It also ensures your EF C# POCOs will function equivalently (one to a view and one to table may cause quirks). Miguel's answer below seems to be roughly the same suggestion so I would start here if it's possible.
Option (C) seems worst because your POCO entities may behave have unforseen quirks when mapped to different SQL pieces (tables vs. views) causing coding issues down the road.
Option (A), while it fits EF's intention best (entities mapped to tables), it means to get your joined view you must alter your C# services/repositories to work with the EF entities for Add, Update, Delete operations, but tell the Pull/Read-like methods to grab data from the joint views. This is probably your best choice, but involves more work than (B) and may also affect Schema in the long run. More complexity equals more risk.
Edit I'm not sure this is actually possible, and this is why:
The assumption is that a foreign key references a primary key. What you've got is two fields which are both acting as primary keys of vwContact, but depending on which object you ask it's a different field that's the primary key. You can only have one primary key at once, and although you can have a compound primary key you can't do primary key things with only half of it - you have to have a compound foreign key with which to reference it.
This is why Entity Framework doesn't have a way to specify the mapping column on the target side, because it has to use the primary key.
Now, you can layer some more objects on top of the EF entities to do some manual lookup and simulate the navigation properties, but I don't think you can actually get EF to do what you want because SQL itself won't do what you want - the rule is one primary key per table, and it's not negotiable.
From what you said about your database structure, it may be possible for you to write a migration script which can give the contact entities a consistent primary key and update everything else to refer to them with that single primary key rather than the two systems resulting from the legacy data, as you can of course do joins on any fields you like. I don't think you're going to get a seamlessly functional EF model without changing your database though.
Original Answer That Won't Work
So, vwContact contains a key KeyField which is referenced by many SomeObjects and another key LegacyKeyField which is referenced by many LegacyObjects.
I think this is how you have to approach this:
Give vwContact navigation properties for SomeObject and LegacyObject collections:
public virtual ICollection<SomeObject> SomeObjects { get; set; }
public virtual ICollection<LegacyObject> LegacyObjects { get; set; }
Give those navigation properties foreign keys to use:
modelBuilder.Entity<vwContact>()
.HasMany(c => c.SomeObjects)
.WithRequired(s => s.Contact)
.HasForeignKey(c => c.KeyField);
modelBuilder.Entity<vwContact>()
.HasMany(c => c.LegacyObjects)
.WithRequired(l => l.Contact)
.HasForeignKey(c => c.LegacyKeyField);
The trouble is I would guess you've already tried this and it didn't work, in which case I can't offer you much else as I've not done a huge amount of this kind of thing (our database is much closer to the kinds of thing EF expects so we've had to do relatively minimal mapping overrides, usually with many-to-many relationships).
As for your two calls to HasKey on vwContact, they can't both be the definitive key for the object, so it's either a compound key which features both of them, or pick one, or there's another field you haven't mentioned which is the real primary key. From here it's not really possible to say what the right option there is.
You should be able to do this with two different objects to represent the Contact view.
public class vwContact
{
public int KeyField { get; set; }
public string LegacyKeyField { get; set; }
}
public class vwLegacyContact
{
public int KeyField { get; set; }
public string LegacyKeyField { get; set; }
}
public class SomeObject
{
public virtual vwContact Contact { get; set; }
public int ContactId { get; set; } //references vwContact.KeyField
}
public class LegacyObject
{
public virtual vwLegacyContact Contact { get; set; }
public string ContactId { get; set; } //references vwLegacyContact.LegacyKeyField
}
ModelCreatingFunction(modelBuilder)
{
// can't set both of these, right?
modelBuilder.Entity<vwContact>().HasKey(x => x.KeyField);
modelBuilder.Entity<vwLegacyContact>().HasKey(x => x.LegacyKeyField);
// The rest of your configuration
}
I have tried everything that you can imagine, and found that most solutions won't work in this version of EF... maybe in future versions it supports referencing another entity by using an unique field, but this is not the case now. I also found two solutions that work, but they are more of a workaround than solutions.
I tried all of the following things, that didn't work:
Mapping two entities to the same table: this is not allowed in EF4.
Inheriting from a base that has no key definitions: all root classes must have keys, so that inherited classes share this common key... that is how inheritance works in EF4.
Inheriting from base class that defines all fields, including keys, and then use modelBuilder to tell wich base-properties are keys of the derived types: this doesn't work, because the methos HasKey, Property and others that take members as parameters, must reference members of the class itself... referencing properties of a base class is not allowed. This cannot be done: modelBuilder.HasKey<MyClass>(x => x.BaseKeyField)
The two things that I did that worked:
Without DB changes: Map to the table that is source of the view in question... that is, if vwContact is a view to Contacts table, then you can map a class to Contacts, and use it by setting the key to the KeyField, and another class mapping to the vwContacts view, with the key being LegacyKeyField. In the class Contacts, the LegacyKeyField must exist, and you will have to manage this manually, when using the Contacts class. Also, when using the class vwContacts you will have to manually manage the KeyField, unless it is an autoincrement field in the DB, in this case, you must remove the property from vwContacts class.
Changing DB: Create another view, just like the vwContacts, say vwContactsLegacy, and map it to a class in wich the key is the LegacyKeyField, and map vwContacts to the original view, using KeyField as the key. All limitations from the first case also applies: the vwContacts must have the LegacyKeyField, managed manually. And the vwContactsLegacy, must have the KetField if it is not autoincrement idenitity, otherwise it must not be defined.
There are some limitations:
As I said, these solutions are work-arounds... not real solutions, there are some serious implications, that may even make them undesirable:
EF does not know that you are mapping two classes to the same thing. So when you update one thing, the other one could be changed or not, it depends if the objects is cached or not. Also, you could have two objects at the same time, that represents the same thing on the backing storage, so say you load a vwContact and also a vwContactLegacy, changes both, and then try to save both... you will have to care about this yourself.
You will have to manage one of the keys manually. If you are using vwContacts class, the KeyFieldLegacy is there, and you must fill it. If you want to create a vwContacts, and associate is with a LegacyObject, then you need to create the reference manually, because LegacyObject takes a vwContactsLegacy, not a vwContacts... you will have to create the reference by setting the ContactId field.
I hope that this is more of a help than a disillusion, EF is a powerfull toy, but it is far from perfect... though I think it's going to get much better in the next versions.
I think this may be possible using extension methods, although not directly through EF as #Matthew Walton mentioned in his edit above.
However, with extension methods, you can specify what to do behind the scenes, and have a simple call to it.
public class LegacyObject
{
public virtual vwContact Contact { get; set; }
public string ContactId { get; set; } //references vwContact.LegacyKeyField
}
public class LegacyObjectExtensions
{
public static vwContact Contacts(this LegacyObject legacyObject)
{
var dbContext = new LegacyDbContext();
var contacts = from o in legacyObject
join c in dbContext.vwContact
on o.ContactId == c.LegacyKeyField
select c;
return contacts;
}
}
and
public class SomeObject
{
public virtual vwContact Contact { get; set; }
public int ContactId { get; set; } //references vwContact.KeyField
}
public class SomeObjectExtensions
{
public static vwContact Contacts(this SomeObject someObject)
{
var dbContext = new LegacyDbContext();
var contacts = from o in someObject
join c in dbContext.vwContact
on o.ContactId == c.KeyField
select c;
return contacts;
}
}
Then to use you can simply do like this:
var legacyContacts = legacyObject.Contacts();
var someContacts = someObject.Contacts();
Sometimes it makes more sense to map it from the other end of the relationship, in your case:
modelBuilder.Entity<LegacyObject>().HasRequired(x => x.Contact).WithMany().HasForeignKey(u => u.LegacyKeyField);
however this will require that u.LegacyKeyField is marked as a primary key.
And then I'll give my two cents:
if the Legacy db is using LegacyKeyField, then perhaps the legacy db will be read only. In this case we can create two separate contexts Legacy and Non-legacy and map them accordingly. This can potentially become a bit messy as you'd have to remember which object comes from which context. But then again, nothing stops you from adding the same EF code first object into 2 different contexts
Another solution is to use views with ContactId added for all other legacy tables and map them into one context. This will tax performance for the sake of having cleaner context objects, but this can be counteracted on sql side: indexed views, materialized views, stored procs, etc. So than LEGACY_OBJECT becomes VW_LEGACY OBJECT with CONTACT.ContactId brought over, then:
modelBuilder.Entity<LegacyObject>().ToTable("VW_LEGACY_OBJECT");
modelBuilder.Entity<LegacyObject>().HasRequired(x => x.Contact).WithMany().HasForeignKey(u => u.ContactId);
I personally would go with creating "mapper views" with CustomerId on legacy tables, as it's cleaner from c# layer perspective and you can make those views look like real tables. It is also difficult to suggest a solution without knowing what exactly is the scenario that you have a problem with: querying, loading, saving, etc.

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