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Tip 7 - How to fake Foreign Key Properties in .NET 3.5 SP1

Background

If you've been reading the EF Design Blog you will have seen that we recently announced something called "FK Associations" for the EF in .NET 4.0.

However in .NET 3.5 SP1, we only support Independent Associations. What that means is that the FK Columns aren't available as Properties in the entity. Which in turn means you are forced to build relationships via References to other Entities.

For example, unlike LINQ to SQL, this is not possible in the EF:

product.CategoryID = 2;

Because there is no "CategoryID" property in product entity.

You have to do something like this instead:

product.Category = ctx.Categories.First(c => c.ID == 2);

I.e. you need to use the Category reference. Which means you have to have a Category in memory, or do a query to get one like the example above.

The problem is that not having a property for the CategoryID that you can set directly can be a big pain, and that is why we've added "FK Associations" and "FK Properties" in .NET 4.0.

All well and good, but as Julie Lerman has a habit of reminding me, what about everyone who is using .NET 3.5 SP1 today? Our new features don't really help today.

So...

How can you set the CategoryID if it doesn't actually exist?

Trick question. You can't of course.

But you can achieve the same effect, with code like this:

product.CategoryReference.EntityKey
= new EntityKey("MyContainer.Categories", "ID", 2);

Looks a little complicated doesn't it, so let's break it down:

  1. For each reference "xxx" (like Category) the entity framework also generates an "xxxReference" property that returns an EntityReference. (EntityReference is used heavily by the EF to provide all the plumbing and services required for things like maintaining relationship consistency, and doing Entity lookups based on EntityKeys)
  2. One of the properties of the EntityReference is an EntityKey. We need to set the EntityKey to a new EntityKey if we wish to change the value of the Foreign Key.
  3. In order to create a new EntityKey we need to know 3 things.
    1. The value we want to set the "Foreign Key" to. To be consistent with the earlier code snippets that is 2.
    2. The fully qualified name of the EntitySet that the target Entity belongs to. In this case our target is a Category and we get Categories from the "MyContainer.Categories" set.
    3. The name of the Primary Key Property in the target entity. In this case the primary key of Category is the "ID" property.

Now obviously this is not the sort of code you want to write everywhere you need it. So lets hide this away. So ...

 

How can you use this code to fake a Foreign Key property?

Luckily the Entity Framework generates partial classes for Entities, so you can simply put this logic in your own Product partial class like this:

public int CategoryID {
    get {
        if (this.CategoryReference.EntityKey == null) return 0;
        else return (int) this.CategoryReference
            .EntityKey.EntityKeyValues[0].Value;
    }
    set {
        this.CategoryReference.EntityKey
           = new EntityKey("MyContainer.Categories", "ID", value);
    }
}

Notice that we use the CategoryReference in the getter too. This means that our CategoryID property is simply a view over the CategoryReference, which means that if the EF makes any changes under the hood we don't need to be notified.

With this in place you can write what we wanted all along:

product.CategoryID = 2;

And that can be extremely useful in lots of scenarios, for example MVC controllers and data-binding.

Extra Credit

This solution is essentially just a workaround that hides some of the limitations of independent associations, and like all workarounds it has limitations.  The key then is to make an informed tradeoff between the benefits and the drawbacks. So here are some of the key drawbacks:

  1. Properties in the partial class are not recognized by the Entity Framework, so you can't use them in your LINQ queries.
  2. By referencing the fully qualified EntitySet name in our setter, we have coupled your Entity Class directly to the EntitySet. Now for most people this is not a problem, but it won't work if you try to re-use your entity classes between contexts or if you use MEST.
  3. There are probably more... I'll add them as I think of them!

Comments

  • Anonymous
    March 24, 2009
    PingBack from http://blog.a-foton.ru/index.php/2009/03/25/tip-7-faking-foreign-key-properties-in-net-35-sp1/
  • Anonymous
    March 25, 2009
    Hopefully if you're reading this you've noticed that I've started a series of Tips recently. The Tips
  • Anonymous
    March 25, 2009
    Product.Category will still be null after setting CategoryId. CategoryReference.Load won't work, either. You can write a custom helper that knows about EntityKeys, though.
  • Anonymous
    March 25, 2009
    Craig,Yes Product.Category will be null after you set CategoryID (unless you set the Product is attached and the Category in question is loaded too), but that doesn't really matter, you can still form relationships, which you can't do without this unless you manipulate the reference directly. That is the whole point of this. Forming relationships without reverting to using the EntityReference or Reference properties.As for CategoryReference.Load() that will work if the Product is attached.Alex
  • Anonymous
    March 26, 2009
    Once EF for .NET 4.0 comes out with foreign key associations, will there be an easy way to upgrade your existing EF model built on .NET 3.5 sp1 to use the new associations?
  • Anonymous
    March 26, 2009
    Let me explain why this matters to me:I have an ASP.NET MVC model binder which works in almost exactly the way you describe in the post. The web view contains HTML SELECTs which allow the user to change the "foreign key" values in the relationship. The resulting POST returns the selected IDs. So the model binder can take these IDs and assigned them similarly to how you do CategoryId. This is important, because the model binder cannot have a reference to the ObjectContext. That lives inside the repository, and the web app can't see it.Inside the repository, however, there are validation rules for the updated instance. These validation rules work on the reference, rather than the ID. That's just the natural way to write this sort of code, especially when the validation needs to access sub-properties of the referenced entity. In this case, the "Product" is almost guaranteed to NOT be attached, given the way that the product reference was set, and given that the ObjectContext only lives for the span of the Web request.So there are two different areas of code with different needs and different scope. One can see the ObjectContext and needs access to sub-properties of the referenced entity, the other cannot see the ObjectContext and is getting IDs from the POST anyway, so setting the ID directly is quite convenient.My solution is to use the following helpers inside the repository when I need access to the referenced entity:       public static bool IsLoadable(EntityObject e)       {           return (((e.EntityState) & (System.Data.EntityState.Detached | System.Data.EntityState.Added)) == 0);       }       public static void LoadReference<T>(EntityObject e, EntityReference<T> reference, ObjectContext context) where T: EntityObject       {           if (context == null)           {               throw new ArgumentNullException("context");           }           if (reference.Value == null)           {               if (IsLoadable(e) && (!reference.IsLoaded))               {                   reference.Load();               }               else               {                   if (reference.EntityKey != null)                   {                       reference.Value = (T)context.GetObjectByKey(reference.EntityKey);                   }               }           }       }Then I can write code like this inside the repository:   if (Product.Category == null)   {       LoadReference (Product, Product.CategoryReference, context);   }Now I know that Product.Category will be loaded if the key has been set in any fashion.
  • Anonymous
    March 26, 2009
    @dbstoltez,I don't think we've done anything to make this easy.Mainly because Independent Associations are still valid.What would you like to see? A commandline tool? Or something built-in to VS?Alex
  • Anonymous
    March 26, 2009
    The comment has been removed
  • Anonymous
    March 27, 2009
    Alex, thanks for your comments.It doesn't bother me that my function won't work in 4.0 if I can have FK Associations instead. They are a better solution to this problem anyway. So, regarding dbstoltez's point, yes, it would be nice to have some way to migrate. I don't really care if it's a commandline tool, a Visual Studio tool, or anything else. I probably will want to migrate, because my use fits the FK Associations pattern very well. Actually, I'm really happy to see this feature coming as it makes a whole bunch of things simpler for me.On the other hand, it seems a little disturbing that GetObjectByKey might stop working in certain cases. This method has always "just worked" in the past. It's sort of a refreshing change from things like Load which work some of the time, but not all of the time.Honestly, POCO types are not an important feature to me, so I'm not sure this will impact me personally. I'm probably going to continue using the default EntityObject base type. But having to be aware of the state of the application before calling GetObjectByKey seems like a heavy price to pay.Anyway, thank you for your blogs. I appreciate the information.-Craig
  • Anonymous
    April 02, 2009
    The Entity Framework is pretty big, so when the Entity Framework team talks about things internally we
  • Anonymous
    April 07, 2009
    Yeah, something in vs would be nice to say, "convert model to fk relationships".As a side note, poco types are not that important to me either as I like using the default entity types.  The only thing I do now is i have to update my generated types to inherit from my custom base type but once T4 templates are supported, I won't have to do this manual updating of the generated file, I will just create a custom template.
  • Anonymous
    April 07, 2009
    Background and Motivation: In my last post on EF Jargon I introduced the concept of Relationship Span.
  • Anonymous
    June 21, 2009
    Background and Motivation: In my last post on EF Jargon I introduced the concept of Relationship Span
  • Anonymous
    June 21, 2009
    The Entity Framework is pretty big, so when the Entity Framework team talks about things internally we
  • Anonymous
    September 30, 2009
    I have been using this in a similar way to set the FK relation in EF.Profile.UserReference.EntityKey = User.EntityKey;Obviously, you will need to get the User enity from the context first. But this will not throw state exceptions for those working in MVC or other "disconnected" environment.
  • Anonymous
    October 05, 2009
    The comment has been removed
  • Anonymous
    October 05, 2009
    The comment has been removed
  • Anonymous
    October 05, 2009
    @AlexJThanks for the response.The values that are displayed in the dropdown are correct.  Its only when it binds the selecteditem to the assoication property (which in turn updates the FK property) that things go haywire.Can  you recommend a good resource for learning databinding.Thanks.Chris
  • Anonymous
    October 14, 2009
    What should "MyContainer" be?I'm not sure what the fully qualified name of the EntitySet that the target Entity belongs to is.
  • Anonymous
    October 15, 2009
    The comment has been removed
  • Anonymous
    November 29, 2009
    The comment has been removed
  • Anonymous
    November 29, 2009
    The comment has been removed