Tutorial: Learn about advanced scenarios - ASP.NET MVC with EF Core
In the previous tutorial, you implemented table-per-hierarchy inheritance. This tutorial introduces several topics that are useful to be aware of when you go beyond the basics of developing ASP.NET Core web applications that use Entity Framework Core.
In this tutorial, you:
- Perform raw SQL queries
- Call a query to return entities
- Call a query to return other types
- Call an update query
- Examine SQL queries
- Create an abstraction layer
- Learn about Automatic change detection
- Learn about EF Core source code and development plans
- Learn how to use dynamic LINQ to simplify code
Prerequisites
Perform raw SQL queries
One of the advantages of using the Entity Framework is that it avoids tying your code too closely to a particular method of storing data. It does this by generating SQL queries and commands for you, which also frees you from having to write them yourself. But there are exceptional scenarios when you need to run specific SQL queries that you have manually created. For these scenarios, the Entity Framework Code First API includes methods that enable you to pass SQL commands directly to the database. You have the following options in EF Core 1.0:
Use the
DbSet.FromSql
method for queries that return entity types. The returned objects must be of the type expected by theDbSet
object, and they're automatically tracked by the database context unless you turn tracking off.Use the
Database.ExecuteSqlCommand
for non-query commands.
If you need to run a query that returns types that aren't entities, you can use ADO.NET with the database connection provided by EF. The returned data isn't tracked by the database context, even if you use this method to retrieve entity types.
As is always true when you execute SQL commands in a web application, you must take precautions to protect your site against SQL injection attacks. One way to do that is to use parameterized queries to make sure that strings submitted by a web page can't be interpreted as SQL commands. In this tutorial you'll use parameterized queries when integrating user input into a query.
Call a query to return entities
The DbSet<TEntity>
class provides a method that you can use to execute a query that returns an entity of type TEntity
. To see how this works you'll change the code in the Details
method of the Department controller.
In DepartmentsController.cs
, in the Details
method, replace the code that retrieves a department with a FromSql
method call, as shown in the following highlighted code:
public async Task<IActionResult> Details(int? id)
{
if (id == null)
{
return NotFound();
}
string query = "SELECT * FROM Department WHERE DepartmentID = {0}";
var department = await _context.Departments
.FromSql(query, id)
.Include(d => d.Administrator)
.AsNoTracking()
.FirstOrDefaultAsync();
if (department == null)
{
return NotFound();
}
return View(department);
}
To verify that the new code works correctly, select the Departments tab and then Details for one of the departments.
Call a query to return other types
Earlier you created a student statistics grid for the About page that showed the number of students for each enrollment date. You got the data from the Students entity set (_context.Students
) and used LINQ to project the results into a list of EnrollmentDateGroup
view model objects. Suppose you want to write the SQL itself rather than using LINQ. To do that you need to run a SQL query that returns something other than entity objects. In EF Core 1.0, one way to do that is to write ADO.NET code and get the database connection from EF.
In HomeController.cs
, replace the About
method with the following code:
public async Task<ActionResult> About()
{
List<EnrollmentDateGroup> groups = new List<EnrollmentDateGroup>();
var conn = _context.Database.GetDbConnection();
try
{
await conn.OpenAsync();
using (var command = conn.CreateCommand())
{
string query = "SELECT EnrollmentDate, COUNT(*) AS StudentCount "
+ "FROM Person "
+ "WHERE Discriminator = 'Student' "
+ "GROUP BY EnrollmentDate";
command.CommandText = query;
DbDataReader reader = await command.ExecuteReaderAsync();
if (reader.HasRows)
{
while (await reader.ReadAsync())
{
var row = new EnrollmentDateGroup { EnrollmentDate = reader.GetDateTime(0), StudentCount = reader.GetInt32(1) };
groups.Add(row);
}
}
reader.Dispose();
}
}
finally
{
conn.Close();
}
return View(groups);
}
Add a using statement:
using System.Data.Common;
Run the app and go to the About page. It displays the same data it did before.
Call an update query
Suppose Contoso University administrators want to perform global changes in the database, such as changing the number of credits for every course. If the university has a large number of courses, it would be inefficient to retrieve them all as entities and change them individually. In this section you'll implement a web page that enables the user to specify a factor by which to change the number of credits for all courses, and you'll make the change by executing a SQL UPDATE statement. The web page will look like the following illustration:
In CoursesController.cs
, add UpdateCourseCredits methods for HttpGet and HttpPost:
public IActionResult UpdateCourseCredits()
{
return View();
}
[HttpPost]
public async Task<IActionResult> UpdateCourseCredits(int? multiplier)
{
if (multiplier != null)
{
ViewData["RowsAffected"] =
await _context.Database.ExecuteSqlCommandAsync(
"UPDATE Course SET Credits = Credits * {0}",
parameters: multiplier);
}
return View();
}
When the controller processes an HttpGet request, nothing is returned in ViewData["RowsAffected"]
, and the view displays an empty text box and a submit button, as shown in the preceding illustration.
When the Update button is clicked, the HttpPost method is called, and multiplier has the value entered in the text box. The code then executes the SQL that updates courses and returns the number of affected rows to the view in ViewData
. When the view gets a RowsAffected
value, it displays the number of rows updated.
In Solution Explorer, right-click the Views/Courses folder, and then click Add > New Item.
In the Add New Item dialog, click ASP.NET Core under Installed in the left pane, click Razor View, and name the new view UpdateCourseCredits.cshtml
.
In Views/Courses/UpdateCourseCredits.cshtml
, replace the template code with the following code:
@{
ViewBag.Title = "UpdateCourseCredits";
}
<h2>Update Course Credits</h2>
@if (ViewData["RowsAffected"] == null)
{
<form asp-action="UpdateCourseCredits">
<div class="form-actions no-color">
<p>
Enter a number to multiply every course's credits by: @Html.TextBox("multiplier")
</p>
<p>
<input type="submit" value="Update" class="btn btn-default" />
</p>
</div>
</form>
}
@if (ViewData["RowsAffected"] != null)
{
<p>
Number of rows updated: @ViewData["RowsAffected"]
</p>
}
<div>
@Html.ActionLink("Back to List", "Index")
</div>
Run the UpdateCourseCredits
method by selecting the Courses tab, then adding "/UpdateCourseCredits" to the end of the URL in the browser's address bar (for example: http://localhost:5813/Courses/UpdateCourseCredits
). Enter a number in the text box:
Click Update. You see the number of rows affected:
Click Back to List to see the list of courses with the revised number of credits.
Note that production code would ensure that updates always result in valid data. The simplified code shown here could multiply the number of credits enough to result in numbers greater than 5. (The Credits
property has a [Range(0, 5)]
attribute.) The update query would work but the invalid data could cause unexpected results in other parts of the system that assume the number of credits is 5 or less.
For more information about raw SQL queries, see Raw SQL Queries.
Examine SQL queries
Sometimes it's helpful to be able to see the actual SQL queries that are sent to the database. Built-in logging functionality for ASP.NET Core is automatically used by EF Core to write logs that contain the SQL for queries and updates. In this section you'll see some examples of SQL logging.
Open StudentsController.cs
and in the Details
method set a breakpoint on the if (student == null)
statement.
Run the app in debug mode, and go to the Details page for a student.
Go to the Output window showing debug output, and you see the query:
Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Database.Command:Information: Executed DbCommand (56ms) [Parameters=[@__id_0='?'], CommandType='Text', CommandTimeout='30']
SELECT TOP(2) [s].[ID], [s].[Discriminator], [s].[FirstName], [s].[LastName], [s].[EnrollmentDate]
FROM [Person] AS [s]
WHERE ([s].[Discriminator] = N'Student') AND ([s].[ID] = @__id_0)
ORDER BY [s].[ID]
Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Database.Command:Information: Executed DbCommand (122ms) [Parameters=[@__id_0='?'], CommandType='Text', CommandTimeout='30']
SELECT [s.Enrollments].[EnrollmentID], [s.Enrollments].[CourseID], [s.Enrollments].[Grade], [s.Enrollments].[StudentID], [e.Course].[CourseID], [e.Course].[Credits], [e.Course].[DepartmentID], [e.Course].[Title]
FROM [Enrollment] AS [s.Enrollments]
INNER JOIN [Course] AS [e.Course] ON [s.Enrollments].[CourseID] = [e.Course].[CourseID]
INNER JOIN (
SELECT TOP(1) [s0].[ID]
FROM [Person] AS [s0]
WHERE ([s0].[Discriminator] = N'Student') AND ([s0].[ID] = @__id_0)
ORDER BY [s0].[ID]
) AS [t] ON [s.Enrollments].[StudentID] = [t].[ID]
ORDER BY [t].[ID]
You'll notice something here that might surprise you: the SQL selects up to 2 rows (TOP(2)
) from the Person table. The SingleOrDefaultAsync
method doesn't resolve to 1 row on the server. Here's why:
- If the query would return multiple rows, the method returns null.
- To determine whether the query would return multiple rows, EF has to check if it returns at least 2.
Note that you don't have to use debug mode and stop at a breakpoint to get logging output in the Output window. It's just a convenient way to stop the logging at the point you want to look at the output. If you don't do that, logging continues and you have to scroll back to find the parts you're interested in.
Create an abstraction layer
Many developers write code to implement the repository and unit of work patterns as a wrapper around code that works with the Entity Framework. These patterns are intended to create an abstraction layer between the data access layer and the business logic layer of an application. Implementing these patterns can help insulate your application from changes in the data store and can facilitate automated unit testing or test-driven development (TDD). However, writing additional code to implement these patterns isn't always the best choice for applications that use EF, for several reasons:
The EF context class itself insulates your code from data-store-specific code.
The EF context class can act as a unit-of-work class for database updates that you do using EF.
EF includes features for implementing TDD without writing repository code.
For information about how to implement the repository and unit of work patterns, see the Entity Framework 5 version of this tutorial series.
Entity Framework Core implements an in-memory database provider that can be used for testing. For more information, see Test with InMemory.
Automatic change detection
The Entity Framework determines how an entity has changed (and therefore which updates need to be sent to the database) by comparing the current values of an entity with the original values. The original values are stored when the entity is queried or attached. Some of the methods that cause automatic change detection are the following:
DbContext.SaveChanges
DbContext.Entry
ChangeTracker.Entries
If you're tracking a large number of entities and you call one of these methods many times in a loop, you might get significant performance improvements by temporarily turning off automatic change detection using the ChangeTracker.AutoDetectChangesEnabled
property. For example:
_context.ChangeTracker.AutoDetectChangesEnabled = false;
EF Core source code and development plans
The Entity Framework Core source is at https://github.com/dotnet/efcore. The EF Core repository contains nightly builds, issue tracking, feature specs, design meeting notes, and the roadmap for future development. You can file or find bugs, and contribute.
Although the source code is open, Entity Framework Core is fully supported as a Microsoft product. The Microsoft Entity Framework team keeps control over which contributions are accepted and tests all code changes to ensure the quality of each release.
Reverse engineer from existing database
To reverse engineer a data model including entity classes from an existing database, use the scaffold-dbcontext command. See the getting-started tutorial.
Use dynamic LINQ to simplify code
The third tutorial in this series shows how to write LINQ code by hard-coding column names in a switch
statement. With two columns to choose from, this works fine, but if you have many columns the code could get verbose. To solve that problem, you can use the EF.Property
method to specify the name of the property as a string. To try out this approach, replace the Index
method in the StudentsController
with the following code.
public async Task<IActionResult> Index(
string sortOrder,
string currentFilter,
string searchString,
int? pageNumber)
{
ViewData["CurrentSort"] = sortOrder;
ViewData["NameSortParm"] =
String.IsNullOrEmpty(sortOrder) ? "LastName_desc" : "";
ViewData["DateSortParm"] =
sortOrder == "EnrollmentDate" ? "EnrollmentDate_desc" : "EnrollmentDate";
if (searchString != null)
{
pageNumber = 1;
}
else
{
searchString = currentFilter;
}
ViewData["CurrentFilter"] = searchString;
var students = from s in _context.Students
select s;
if (!String.IsNullOrEmpty(searchString))
{
students = students.Where(s => s.LastName.Contains(searchString)
|| s.FirstMidName.Contains(searchString));
}
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(sortOrder))
{
sortOrder = "LastName";
}
bool descending = false;
if (sortOrder.EndsWith("_desc"))
{
sortOrder = sortOrder.Substring(0, sortOrder.Length - 5);
descending = true;
}
if (descending)
{
students = students.OrderByDescending(e => EF.Property<object>(e, sortOrder));
}
else
{
students = students.OrderBy(e => EF.Property<object>(e, sortOrder));
}
int pageSize = 3;
return View(await PaginatedList<Student>.CreateAsync(students.AsNoTracking(),
pageNumber ?? 1, pageSize));
}
Acknowledgments
Tom Dykstra and Rick Anderson (twitter @RickAndMSFT) wrote this tutorial. Rowan Miller, Diego Vega, and other members of the Entity Framework team assisted with code reviews and helped debug issues that arose while we were writing code for the tutorials. John Parente and Paul Goldman worked on updating the tutorial for ASP.NET Core 2.2.
Troubleshoot common errors
ContosoUniversity.dll used by another process
Error message:
Cannot open '...bin\Debug\netcoreapp1.0\ContosoUniversity.dll' for writing -- 'The process cannot access the file '...\bin\Debug\netcoreapp1.0\ContosoUniversity.dll' because it is being used by another process.
Solution:
Stop the site in IIS Express. Go to the Windows System Tray, find IIS Express and right-click its icon, select the Contoso University site, and then click Stop Site.
Migration scaffolded with no code in Up and Down methods
Possible cause:
The EF CLI commands don't automatically close and save code files. If you have unsaved changes when you run the migrations add
command, EF won't find your changes.
Solution:
Run the migrations remove
command, save your code changes and rerun the migrations add
command.
Errors while running database update
It's possible to get other errors when making schema changes in a database that has existing data. If you get migration errors you can't resolve, you can either change the database name in the connection string or delete the database. With a new database, there's no data to migrate, and the update-database command is much more likely to complete without errors.
The simplest approach is to rename the database in appsettings.json
. The next time you run database update
, a new database will be created.
To delete a database in SSOX, right-click the database, click Delete, and then in the Delete Database dialog box select Close existing connections and click OK.
To delete a database by using the CLI, run the database drop
CLI command:
dotnet ef database drop
Error locating SQL Server instance
Error Message:
A network-related or instance-specific error occurred while establishing a connection to SQL Server. The server was not found or was not accessible. Verify that the instance name is correct and that SQL Server is configured to allow remote connections. (provider: SQL Network Interfaces, error: 26 - Error Locating Server/Instance Specified)
Solution:
Check the connection string. If you have manually deleted the database file, change the name of the database in the construction string to start over with a new database.
Get the code
Download or view the completed application.
Additional resources
For more information about EF Core, see the Entity Framework Core documentation. A book is also available: Entity Framework Core in Action.
For information on how to deploy a web app, see Host and deploy ASP.NET Core.
For information about other topics related to ASP.NET Core MVC, such as authentication and authorization, see Overview of ASP.NET Core.
Next steps
In this tutorial, you:
- Performed raw SQL queries
- Called a query to return entities
- Called a query to return other types
- Called an update query
- Examined SQL queries
- Created an abstraction layer
- Learned about Automatic change detection
- Learned about EF Core source code and development plans
- Learned how to use dynamic LINQ to simplify code
This completes this series of tutorials on using the Entity Framework Core in an ASP.NET Core MVC application. This series worked with a new database; an alternative is to reverse engineer a model from an existing database.