As a general rule, Entity Framework Core attempts to evaluate a query on the server as much as possible. EF Core converts parts of the query into parameters, which it can evaluate on the client side. The rest of the query (along with the generated parameters) is given to the database provider to determine the equivalent database query to evaluate on the server. EF Core supports partial client evaluation in the top-level projection (essentially, the last call to Select()). If the top-level projection in the query can't be translated to the server, EF Core will fetch any required data from the server and evaluate remaining parts of the query on the client. If EF Core detects an expression, in any place other than the top-level projection, which can't be translated to the server, then it throws a runtime exception. See How queries work to understand how EF Core determines what can't be translated to server.
Note
Prior to version 3.0, Entity Framework Core supported client evaluation anywhere in the query. For more information, see the previous versions section.
In the following example, a helper method is used to standardize URLs for blogs, which are returned from a SQL Server database. Since the SQL Server provider has no insight into how this method is implemented, it isn't possible to translate it into SQL. All other aspects of the query are evaluated in the database, but passing the returned URL through this method is done on the client.
var blogs = context.Blogs
.OrderByDescending(blog => blog.Rating)
.Select(
blog => new { Id = blog.BlogId, Url = StandardizeUrl(blog.Url) })
.ToList();
public static string StandardizeUrl(string url)
{
url = url.ToLower();
if (!url.StartsWith("http://"))
{
url = string.Concat("http://", url);
}
return url;
}
Unsupported client evaluation
While client evaluation is useful, it can result in poor performance sometimes. Consider the following query, in which the helper method is now used in a where filter. Because the filter can't be applied in the database, all the data needs to be pulled into memory to apply the filter on the client. Based on the filter and the amount of data on the server, client evaluation could result in poor performance. So Entity Framework Core blocks such client evaluation and throws a runtime exception.
var blogs = context.Blogs
.Where(blog => StandardizeUrl(blog.Url).Contains("dotnet"))
.ToList();
Explicit client evaluation
You may need to force into client evaluation explicitly in certain cases like following
The amount of data is small so that evaluating on the client doesn't incur a huge performance penalty.
The LINQ operator being used has no server-side translation.
In such cases, you can explicitly opt into client evaluation by calling methods like AsEnumerable or ToList (AsAsyncEnumerable or ToListAsync for async). By using AsEnumerable you would be streaming the results, but using ToList would cause buffering by creating a list, which also takes additional memory. Though if you're enumerating multiple times, then storing results in a list helps more since there's only one query to the database. Depending on the particular usage, you should evaluate which method is more useful for the case.
var blogs = context.Blogs
.AsEnumerable()
.Where(blog => StandardizeUrl(blog.Url).Contains("dotnet"))
.ToList();
Tip
If you are using AsAsyncEnumerable and want to compose the query further on client side then you can use System.Interactive.Async library which defines operators for async enumerables. For more information, see client side linq operators.
Potential memory leak in client evaluation
Since query translation and compilation are expensive, EF Core caches the compiled query plan. The cached delegate may use client code while doing client evaluation of top-level projection. EF Core generates parameters for the client-evaluated parts of the tree and reuses the query plan by replacing the parameter values. But certain constants in the expression tree can't be converted into parameters. If the cached delegate contains such constants, then those objects can't be garbage collected since they're still being referenced. If such an object contains a DbContext or other services in it, then it could cause the memory usage of the app to grow over time. This behavior is generally a sign of a memory leak. EF Core throws an exception whenever it comes across constants of a type that can't be mapped using current database provider. Common causes and their solutions are as follows:
Using an instance method: When using instance methods in a client projection, the expression tree contains a constant of the instance. If your method doesn't use any data from the instance, consider making the method static. If you need instance data in the method body, then pass the specific data as an argument to the method.
Passing constant arguments to method: This case arises generally by using this in an argument to client method. Consider splitting the argument in to multiple scalar arguments, which can be mapped by the database provider.
Other constants: If a constant is come across in any other case, then you can evaluate whether the constant is needed in processing. If it's necessary to have the constant, or if you can't use a solution from the above cases, then create a local variable to store the value and use local variable in the query. EF Core will convert the local variable into a parameter.
Previous versions
The following section applies to EF Core versions before 3.0.
Older EF Core versions supported client evaluation in any part of the query--not just the top-level projection. That's why queries similar to one posted under the Unsupported client evaluation section worked correctly. Since this behavior could cause unnoticed performance issues, EF Core logged a client evaluation warning. For more information on viewing logging output, see Logging.
Optionally EF Core allowed you to change the default behavior to either throw an exception or do nothing when doing client evaluation (except for in the projection). The exception throwing behavior would make it similar to the behavior in 3.0. To change the behavior, you need to configure warnings while setting up the options for your context - typically in DbContext.OnConfiguring, or in Startup.cs if you're using ASP.NET Core.
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This module guides you through the steps to create a data access project. You connect to a relational database and construct create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) queries by using Entity Framework Core (EF Core).