I'm doing my homework, a WCF service that uses SQL Server with Entity Framework, hosted through a console application, and using a WPF client.
There are 3 different projects, and the host and the service is in the same solution. I've included the Entity Framework connection string in the console hosts' app.config file from the web.config file from the service. This way the server and the host throw an exception when I try to make a query:
System.Data.Entity.Core.EntityException: 'The underlying provider failed on Open.'
The inner exception says:
SqlException: An attempt to attach an auto-named database for file C:\Users\username\source\repos\BlogAppWcf\BlogHost\bin\Debug\BlogDb.mdf failed. A database with the same name exists, or specified file cannot be opened, or it is located on UNC share.
So it basically searches for the .mdf file in it's own project folder, while it's inside the service's App_Data folder.
The original connection string looks like this, I copied this to the host's app.config from the web.config:
connectionString="metadata=res://*/BlogDbEntities.csdl|res://*/BlogDbEntities.ssdl|res://*/BlogDbEntities.msl;
provider=System.Data.SqlClient;
provider connection string="
data source=(LocalDB)\MSSQLLocalDB;
attachdbfilename=|DataDirectory|\BlogDb.mdf;
integrated security=True;
MultipleActiveResultSets=True;App=EntityFramework""
I've tried modifying the AttachDbFilename attribute in the app.config, I gave it an absolute path like this:
attachdbfilename=C:\Users\username\source\repos\BlogAppWcf\BlogAppWcf\App_Data\BlogDb.mdf;
and this way it works like a charm! No more exceptions on queries.
But this isn't the right way to do it, especially because I have to send it to my teacher. I want to give it a relative path, just like this:
attachdbfilename=..\..\..\BlogAppWcf\App_Data\BlogDb.mdf;
but it doesn't work this way.
Has anyone got any suggestions, maybe I'm doing or thinking something completely wrong?
According to your description and the issue you encountered, I think the problem boils down to the fact that the attached database is not properly attached to VS built-in database server instance. For this reason, I think we could configure the EntityFramework with VS built-in database instance string.
Data Source=(localdb)\MSSQLLocalDB;Initial Catalog=MyStore;Integrated
Security=True;Connect
Timeout=30;Encrypt=False;TrustServerCertificate=False;ApplicationIntent=ReadWrite;MultiSubnetFailover=False
And then override the seed method of the DropCreateDatabaseAlways/DropCreateDatabaseIfModelChanges class to provide the seed data.
Feel free to let me know if there is anything I can help with.
I'm struggling with an issue that seemingly came out of nowhere for me.
I'm using A DbContext with a connection string specified from a Web.config file. It was working fine, until it wasn't. Now when I run my integration tests, my DbContext can't save changes and I get the "Login failed for user Microsoft\my#email.com" exception, where Microsoft\my#email.com is the email I have registered with my Microsoft account. The strange thing is is that my SQL server uses Windows authentication, and I don't specify a username to be used anywhere in my connections. I've debugged and verified that my context's connection string is accurate, so I have no idea why my connection would be attempting to connect with a username I never set, from an account that I don't link to anywhere in my code. I can also connect to my localhost db fine thru SSMS using Windows auth, so I know that isn't the issue. I don't recall explicitly changing anything, however something obviously got switched somewhere. See my connection string below.
<add name="DefaultConnection" connectionString="Data Source=localhost;Initial Catalog=MyDatabase;Integrated Security=True" providerName="System.Data.SqlClient"/>
Is there another place a connection might be attempting to pull information from, or something I may be missing in regards to my connection? Any guidance here is greatly appreciated!
I needed to run Visual Studio as an administrator in order for my program to have access to localhost, and the user it used was coming from my Microsoft account. Hope this helps someone else running in to this!
Slightly at my wits end. Built an application, running fine locally. Migrated my database to MSSQL without issue, uploaded the site, can't seem to get the application to connect to the database. Any page that accesses the database I get a generic error message.
I've tried all the separate combinations of connection strings I could think of using the Godaddy recommended connection strings. Perhaps I am overlooking something simple?
I'm using Entity Framework Code-First -- My context model is called CombosContext.
<add name="CombosContext" connectionString=" Server=jelatin.db.9508732.hostedresource.com; Database=jelatin; User ID=jelatin; Password=********; Trusted_Connection=False" providerName="System.Data.SqlClient" />
<remove name="LocalSqlServer"/>
<add name="LocalSqlServer" connectionString=" Server=jelatin.db.9508732.hostedresource.com; Database=jelatin; User ID=jelatin; Password=********; Trusted_Connection=False" providerName="System.Data.SqlClient" />
Server: jelatin.db.9508732.hostedresource.com
DB name: jelatin
user: jelatin
Table: Comboes
I'm unfamiliar with GoDaddy hosted SQL, but usually a connection string to MS SQL Server uses "Data Source" instead of "Server" and "Initial Catalog" instead of "Database".
UPDATE
I didn't realize Server and Database were allowed options in the Connection String. Sorry for the confusion.
Regarding the database itself - are you letting EF create the database? Does the user have permission on GoDaddy's system to create a database?
If you have already created the database, did you populate anything? I have found that EF Code First won't correctly populate the database if the database exists and the metadata table doesn't. If you can, try copying your local database up to GoDaddy, and see if the connection works.
Finally, for your generic error message - is it coming back in a 500 error? If so, have you tried using either IE or Chrome's dev tools to inspect the response? Better error information is usually hidden in there.
I have a website writen in ASP.NET and C#.
The site works when run locally, however I don't have any experience with uploading. Recently I got a free hosting package from somee.com and am currently trying to upload it.
Basically, the pages that don't require database connection work, the ones that do don't. So, I've created a database on somee.com and attached my database to that. I've tested it through somee.com control panel with a couple of querys and it works fine.
So I believe the site is uploaded correctly, database works also. I figure it must be a connection problem. In my codebehind, every database connection uses the web.config connection string. I believe there is a problem somewhere in the web.config file, specifically with the connection string.
I have replaced my connection string with the connection string generated by the somee.com control panel which is:
<add name="feniks_dbConnectionString"
connectionString="workstation id=SQLEXPRESS003.mssql.somee.com;packet size=4096;user id=*;pwd=*;data source=SQLEXPRESS003.mssql.somee.com;persist security info=False;initial catalog=SQLEXPRESS003"
providerName="System.Data.SqlClient" />
I've marked my id and pass with *. I keep getting the same error, you can try it yourself on http://aspsitetest.somee.com/index.aspx.
Error on page not about sql-connect - it writes about wrong web.config
search for duplicate:
There is a duplicate 'system.web.extensions/scripting/scriptResourceHandler' section defined
If the same web.config works on local machine, maybe you use another version of IIS.
I was using an .mdf for connecting to a database and entityClient. Now I want to change the connection string so that there will be no .mdf file.
Is the following connectionString correct?
<connectionStrings>
<!--<add name="conString" connectionString="metadata=res://*/conString.csdl|res://*/conString.ssdl|res://*/conString.msl;provider=System.Data.SqlClient;provider connection string="Data Source=.\SQL2008;AttachDbFilename=|DataDirectory|\NData.mdf;Integrated Security=True;Connect Timeout=30;User Instance=True;MultipleActiveResultSets=True"" providerName="System.Data.EntityClient" />-->
<add name="conString" connectionString="metadata=res://*/conString.csdl|res://*/conString.ssdl|res://*/conString.msl;provider=System.Data.SqlClient;provider connection string="Data Source=.\SQL2008;Initial Catalog=NData;Integrated Security=True;Connect Timeout=30;User Instance=True;MultipleActiveResultSets=True"" providerName="System.Data.EntityClient" />
Because I always get the error:
The underlying provider failed on Open
I had this error and found a few solutions:
Looking at your connection string, it looks valid. I found this blog post, the problem here is that they were using Integrated Security. If you are running on IIS, your IIS user needs access to the database.
If you are using Entity Framework with Transactions, Entity Framework automatically opens and closes a connection with each database call. So when using transactions, you are attempting to spread a transaction out over multiple connections. This elevates to MSDTC.
(See this reference for more information.)
Changing my code to the following fixed it:
using (DatabaseEntities context = new DatabaseEntities())
{
context.Connection.Open();
// the rest
}
context.Connection.Open() didn't help solving my problem so I tried enabling "Allow Remote Clients" in DTC config, no more error.
In windows 7 you can open the DTC config by running dcomcnfg, Component Services -> Computers -> My Computer -> Distributed Transaction Coordinator -> Right click to Local DTC -> Security.
You should see innerException to see what the inner cause of throwing of
error is.
In my case, the original error was:
Unable to open the physical file "D:\Projects2\xCU\xCU\App_Data\xCUData_log.ldf". Operating system error 5: "5(Access is denied.)".
An attempt to attach an auto-named database for file D:\Projects2\xCU\xCU\App_Data\xCUData.mdf failed. A database with the same name exists, or specified file cannot be opened, or it is located on UNC share.
which solved by giving full permission to current user for accessing related mdf and ldf files using files' properties.
I found the problem was that I had the server path within the connection string in one of these variants:
SERVER\SQLEXPRESS
SERVER
When really I should have:
.\SQLEXPRESS
For some reason I got the error whenever it had difficulty locating the instance of SQL.
This is common issue only. Even I have faced this issue. On the development machine, configured with Windows authentication, it is worked perfectly:
<add name="ShoppingCartAdminEntities" connectionString="metadata=res://*/ShoppingCartAPIModel.csdl|res://*/ShoppingCartAPIModel.ssdl|res://*/ShoppingCartAPIModel.msl;provider=System.Data.SqlClient;provider connection string="data source=.\SQlExpress;initial catalog=ShoppingCartAdmin;Integrated Security=True;multipleactiveresultsets=True;application name=EntityFramework"" providerName="System.Data.EntityClient" />
Once hosted in IIS with the same configuration, I got this error:
The underlying provider failed on Open
It was solved changing connectionString in the configuration file:
<add name="MyEntities" connectionString="metadata=res://*/ShoppingCartAPIModel.csdl|res://*/ShoppingCartAPIModel.ssdl|res://*/ShoppingCartAPIModel.msl;provider=System.Data.SqlClient;provider connection string="data source=MACHINE_Name\SQlExpress;initial catalog=ShoppingCartAdmin;persist security info=True;user id=sa;password=notmyrealpassword;multipleactiveresultsets=True;application name=EntityFramework"" providerName="System.Data.EntityClient" />
Other common mistakes could be:
Database service could be stopped
Data Source attributes pointing to a local database with Windows authentication and hosted in IIS
Username and password could be wrong.
When you receive this exception, make sure to expand the detail and look at the inner exception details as it will provide details on why the login failed. In my case the connection string contained a user that did not have access to my database.
Regardless of whether you use Integrated Security (the context of the logged in Windows User) or an individual SQL account, make sure that the user has proper access under 'Security' for the database you are trying to access to prevent this issue.
The SQL Server Express service were not set tostart automatically.
1) Go to control panel
2) Administrative Tools
3) Service
4) Set SQL Server express to start automatically by clicking on it
5) Right click and start the service
I hope that will help.
I had a similar issue with the SQL Server Express Edition on Windows Server 2003. I simply added the network service as a user in the database security.
This can also happen if you restore a database and the user already exists with different schema, leaving you unable to assign the correct permissions.
To correct this run:
USE your_database
EXEC sp_change_users_login 'Auto_Fix', 'user', NULL, 'cf'
GO
EXEC sp_change_users_login 'update_one', 'user', 'user'
GO
I posted a similar issue here, working with a SQL 2012 db hosted on Amazon RDS. The problem was in the connection string - I had "Application Name" and "App" properties in there. Once I removed those, it worked.
Entity Framework 5 and Amazon RDS - "The underlying provider failed on Open."
Make sure that each element value in the connection string being supplied is correct. In my case, I was getting the same error because the name of the catalog (database name) specified in the connection string was incorrect.
I had a similar issue with exceptions due to the connection state, then I realized I had my domain service class variable marked as static (by mistake).
My guess is that once the service library is loaded into memory, each new call ends up using the same static variable value (domain service instance), causing conflicts via the connection state.
I think also that each client call resulted in a new thread, so multiple threads accessing the same domain service instance equated to a train wreck.
I had the same problem but what worked for me was removing this from the Connection String:
persist security info=True
I had a similar error with the inner exception as below:
operation is not valid for the state of the transaction
I could resolve it by enabling DTC security settings.
Go To Properties of DTC, under Security Tab, check the below
Network DTC Access
Allow RemoteClients
Transaction Manager Communication
Allow Inbound
Allow Outbound
If you happen to get this error on an ASP.NET web application, in addition to other things mentioned check the following:
Database User Security Permissions (which users are allowed access to your database.
Check your application pool in IIS and make sure it's the correct one that is allowed access to your database.
I got rid of this by resetting IIS, but still using Integrated Authentication in the connection string.
Defining a new Windows Firewall rule for SQL Server (and for port 1433) on the server machine solves this error (if your servername, user login name or password is not wrong in your connection string...).
NONE of the answers worked for me
I think that some of us all make silly mistakes, there are 100 ways to fail ...
My issue was new project, I setup all the configuration in another project, but the caller was a Web Api project in which I had to copy the same connection string in the Web api project.
I think this is crazy considering I was not even newing up dbcontext or anything from the web api.
Otherwise the class library was trying to look for a Database named
TokenApi.Core.CalContext
of which my project is named TokenApi.Core and the CalContext is the name of the connection string and the file name
I was searching all over the web for this problem. I had the wrong name in the connection string, please check you connection string in web.config. I had name="AppTest" but it should have been name="App".
In my AppTestContext.cs file I had:
public AppTestContext() : this("App") { }
Wrong connection string:
<add connectionString="Data Source=127.0.0.1;Initial Catalog=AppTest;Integrated Security=SSPI;MultipleActiveResultSets=True" name="AppTest" providerName="System.Data.SqlClient" />
Right connection string:
<add connectionString="Data Source=127.0.0.1;Initial Catalog=AppTest;Integrated Security=SSPI;MultipleActiveResultSets=True" name="App" providerName="System.Data.SqlClient" />
A common mistake that I did because I was moving application from once pc to another and none of the above worked was that I forgot to copy the connection string to both App.Config and Web.Config!
I had a similar problem: In my test-cases executions I always got this error. I found out, that my "Distributed Transaction Service" was not started (run: services.msc -> start "Distributed Transaction Service" (best to set it to start automatic)). After I did that, it worked like a charm...
I was also facing the same issue. Now I have done it by removing the user name and password from the connection string.
For me it was just a simple mistake:
I used Amazon EC2, and I used my elastic IP address in the connection string, but when I changed IP addresses I forgot to update my connection string.
I had this error suddenly happen out of the blue on one of our sites. In my case, it turned out that the SQL user's password had expired! Unticking the password expiration box in SQL Server Management Studio did the trick!
I had the same issue few days ago, using "Integrated Security=True;" in the connection string you need to run the application pool identity under "localsystem" Sure this is not recommended but for testing it does the job.
This is how you can change the identity in IIS 7:
http://www.iis.net/learn/manage/configuring-security/application-pool-identities
In IIS set the App Pool Identity As Service Account user or Administrator Account or ant account which has permission to do the operation on that DataBase.
In my case I had a mismatch between the connection string name I was registering in the context's constructor vs the name in my web.config. Simple mistake caused by copy and paste :D
public DataContext()
: base(nameOrConnectionString: "ConnStringName")
{
Database.SetInitializer<DataContext>(null);
}
I had this problem because the Application Pool login this app was running under had changed.
In IIS:
Find the Application pool by clicking on your site and going to Basic Settings.
Go to Application Pools.
Click on your site's application pool.
Click on Advanced Settings.
In Identity, enter account login and password.
Restart your site and try again.
I have solved this way.
Step 1:
Open Internet Information Service Manager
Step 2:
Click on Application Pools in left navigation tree.
Step 3:
Select your version Pool. In my case, I am using ASP .Net v4.0. If you dont have this version, select DefaultAppPool.
Step 4:
Right click on step 3, and select advanced settings.
Step 5:
Select Identity in properties window and click the button to change the value.
Step 6:
Select Local System in Built-in accounts combo box and click ok.
That's it. Now run your application. Everything works well.
Codeproject Solution : the-underlying-provider-failed-on-open
I get this error when call async EF method from sync Main console (await was skipped).
Because async opening a connection was for an already disposed data context.
Solve: call async EF methods correctly