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CSDL Specification

Note

CSDL v1 is unsupported, please update to V3

Conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) is an XML-based language that describes the entities, relationships, and functions that make up a conceptual model of a data-driven application. This conceptual model can be used by the Entity Framework or WCF Data Services. The metadata that is described with CSDL is used by the Entity Framework to map entities and relationships that are defined in a conceptual model to a data source. For more information, see SSDL Specification and MSL Specification.

CSDL is the Entity Framework's implementation of the Entity Data Model.

In an Entity Framework application, conceptual model metadata is loaded from a .csdl file (written in CSDL) into an instance of the System.Data.Metadata.Edm.EdmItemCollection and is accessible by using methods in the System.Data.Metadata.Edm.MetadataWorkspace class. Entity Framework uses conceptual model metadata to translate queries against the conceptual model to data source-specific commands.

The EF Designer stores conceptual model information in an .edmx file at design time. At build time, the EF Designer uses information in an .edmx file to create the .csdl file that is needed by Entity Framework at runtime.

Versions of CSDL are differentiated by XML namespaces.

CSDL Version XML Namespace
CSDL v1 https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/2006/04/edm
CSDL v2 https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/2008/09/edm
CSDL v3 https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/2009/11/edm

Association Element (CSDL)

An Association element defines a relationship between two entity types. An association must specify the entity types that are involved in the relationship and the possible number of entity types at each end of the relationship, which is known as the multiplicity. The multiplicity of an association end can have a value of one (1), zero or one (0..1), or many (*). This information is specified in two child End elements.

Entity type instances at one end of an association can be accessed through navigation properties or foreign keys, if they are exposed on an entity type.

In an application, an instance of an association represents a specific association between instances of entity types. Association instances are logically grouped in an association set.

An Association element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one element)
  • End (exactly 2 elements)
  • ReferentialConstraint (zero or one element)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements)

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the Association element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the association.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the Association element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows an Association element that defines the CustomerOrders association when foreign keys have not been exposed on the Customer and Order entity types. The Multiplicity values for each End of the association indicate that many Orders can be associated with a Customer, but only one Customer can be associated with an Order. Additionally, the OnDelete element indicates that all Orders that are related to a particular Customer and have been loaded into the ObjectContext will be deleted if the Customer is deleted.

 <Association Name="CustomerOrders">
   <End Type="ExampleModel.Customer" Role="Customer" Multiplicity="1" >
         <OnDelete Action="Cascade" />
   </End>
   <End Type="ExampleModel.Order" Role="Order" Multiplicity="*" />
 </Association>

 

The following example shows an Association element that defines the CustomerOrders association when foreign keys have been exposed on the Customer and Order entity types. With foreign keys exposed, the relationship between the entities is managed with a ReferentialConstraint element. A corresponding AssociationSetMapping element is not necessary to map this association to the data source.

 <Association Name="CustomerOrders">
   <End Type="ExampleModel.Customer" Role="Customer" Multiplicity="1" >
         <OnDelete Action="Cascade" />
   </End>
   <End Type="ExampleModel.Order" Role="Order" Multiplicity="*" />
   <ReferentialConstraint>
        <Principal Role="Customer">
            <PropertyRef Name="Id" />
        </Principal>
        <Dependent Role="Order">
             <PropertyRef Name="CustomerId" />
         </Dependent>
   </ReferentialConstraint>
 </Association>

 

 

AssociationSet Element (CSDL)

The AssociationSet element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) is a logical container for association instances of the same type. An association set provides a definition for grouping association instances so that they can be mapped to a data source.  

The AssociationSet element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one elements allowed)
  • End (exactly two elements required)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements allowed)

The Association attribute specifies the type of association that an association set contains. The entity sets that make up the ends of an association set are specified with exactly two child End elements.

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the AssociationSet element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the entity set. The value of the Name attribute cannot be the same as the value of the Association attribute.
Association Yes The fully-qualified name of the association that the association set contains instances of. The association must be in the same namespace as the association set.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the AssociationSet element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows an EntityContainer element with two AssociationSet elements:

 <EntityContainer Name="BooksContainer" >
   <EntitySet Name="Books" EntityType="BooksModel.Book" />
   <EntitySet Name="Publishers" EntityType="BooksModel.Publisher" />
   <EntitySet Name="Authors" EntityType="BooksModel.Author" />
   <AssociationSet Name="PublishedBy" Association="BooksModel.PublishedBy">
     <End Role="Book" EntitySet="Books" />
     <End Role="Publisher" EntitySet="Publishers" />
   </AssociationSet>
   <AssociationSet Name="WrittenBy" Association="BooksModel.WrittenBy">
     <End Role="Book" EntitySet="Books" />
     <End Role="Author" EntitySet="Authors" />
   </AssociationSet>
 </EntityContainer>

 

 

CollectionType Element (CSDL)

The CollectionType element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) specifies that a function parameter or function return type is a collection. The CollectionType element can be a child of the Parameter element or the ReturnType (Function) element. The type of collection can be specified by using either the Type attribute or one of the following child elements:

  • CollectionType
  • ReferenceType
  • RowType
  • TypeRef

Note

A model will not validate if the type of a collection is specified with both the Type attribute and a child element.

 

Applicable Attributes

The following table describes the attributes that can be applied to the CollectionType element. Note that the DefaultValue, MaxLength, FixedLength, Precision, Scale, Unicode, and Collation attributes are only applicable to collections of EDMSimpleTypes.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Type No The type of the collection.
Nullable No True (the default value) or False depending on whether the property can have a null value.
[!NOTE]
> In the CSDL v1, a complex type property must have Nullable="False".
DefaultValue No The default value of the property.
MaxLength No The maximum length of the property value.
FixedLength No True or False depending on whether the property value will be stored as a fixed length string.
Precision No The precision of the property value.
Scale No The scale of the property value.
SRID No Spatial System Reference Identifier. Valid only for properties of spatial types.   For more information, see SRID and SRID (SQL Server)
Unicode No True or False depending on whether the property value will be stored as a Unicode string.
Collation No A string that specifies the collating sequence to be used in the data source.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the CollectionType element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows a model-defined function that that uses a CollectionType element to specify that the function returns a collection of Person entity types (as specified with the ElementType attribute).

 <Function Name="LastNamesAfter">
        <Parameter Name="someString" Type="Edm.String"/>
        <ReturnType>
             <CollectionType  ElementType="SchoolModel.Person"/>
        </ReturnType>
        <DefiningExpression>
             SELECT VALUE p
             FROM SchoolEntities.People AS p
             WHERE p.LastName >= someString
        </DefiningExpression>
 </Function>

 

The following example shows a model-defined function that uses a CollectionType element to specify that the function returns a collection of rows (as specified in the RowType element).

 <Function Name="LastNamesAfter">
   <Parameter Name="someString" Type="Edm.String" />
   <ReturnType>
    <CollectionType>
      <RowType>
        <Property Name="FirstName" Type="Edm.String" Nullable="false" />
        <Property Name="LastName" Type="Edm.String" Nullable="false" />
      </RowType>
    </CollectionType>
   </ReturnType>
   <DefiningExpression>
             SELECT VALUE ROW(p.FirstName, p.LastName)
             FROM SchoolEntities.People AS p
             WHERE p.LastName &gt;= somestring
   </DefiningExpression>
 </Function>

 

The following example shows a model-defined function that uses the CollectionType element to specify that the function accepts as a parameter a collection of Department entity types.

 <Function Name="GetAvgBudget">
      <Parameter Name="Departments">
          <CollectionType>
             <TypeRef Type="SchoolModel.Department"/>
          </CollectionType>
           </Parameter>
       <ReturnType Type="Collection(Edm.Decimal)"/>
       <DefiningExpression>
             SELECT VALUE AVG(d.Budget) FROM Departments AS d
       </DefiningExpression>
 </Function>

 

 

ComplexType Element (CSDL)

A ComplexType element defines a data structure composed of EdmSimpleType properties or other complex types.  A complex type can be a property of an entity type or another complex type. A complex type is similar to an entity type in that a complex type defines data. However, there are some key differences between complex types and entity types:

  • Complex types do not have identities (or keys) and therefore cannot exist independently. Complex types can only exist as properties of entity types or other complex types.
  • Complex types cannot participate in associations. Neither end of an association can be a complex type, and therefore navigation properties cannot be defined for complex types.
  • A complex type property cannot have a null value, though the scalar properties of a complex type may each be set to null.

A ComplexType element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one element)
  • Property (zero or more elements)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements)

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the ComplexType element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the complex type. The name of a complex type cannot be the same as the name of another complex type, entity type, or association that is within the scope of the model.
BaseType No The name of another complex type that is the base type of the complex type that is being defined.
[!NOTE]
> This attribute is not applicable in CSDL v1. Inheritance for complex types is not supported in that version.
Abstract No True or False (the default value) depending on whether the complex type is an abstract type.
[!NOTE]
> This attribute is not applicable in CSDL v1. Complex types in that version cannot be abstract types.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the ComplexType element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows a complex type, Address, with the EdmSimpleType properties StreetAddress, City, StateOrProvince, Country, and PostalCode.

 <ComplexType Name="Address" >
   <Property Type="String" Name="StreetAddress" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="String" Name="City" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="String" Name="StateOrProvince" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="String" Name="Country" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="String" Name="PostalCode" Nullable="false" />
 </ComplexType>

 

To define the complex type Address (above) as a property of an entity type, you must declare the property type in the entity type definition. The following example shows the Address property as a complex type on an entity type (Publisher):

 <EntityType Name="Publisher">
       <Key>
         <PropertyRef Name="Id" />
       </Key>
       <Property Type="Int32" Name="Id" Nullable="false" />
       <Property Type="String" Name="Name" Nullable="false" />
       <Property Type="BooksModel.Address" Name="Address" Nullable="false" />
       <NavigationProperty Name="Books" Relationship="BooksModel.PublishedBy"
                           FromRole="Publisher" ToRole="Book" />
     </EntityType>

 

 

DefiningExpression Element (CSDL)

The DefiningExpression element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) contains an Entity SQL expression that defines a function in the conceptual model.  

Note

For validation purposes, a DefiningExpression element can contain arbitrary content. However, Entity Framework will throw an exception at runtime if a DefiningExpression element does not contain valid Entity SQL.

 

Applicable Attributes

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the DefiningExpression element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

Example

The following example uses a DefiningExpression element to define a function that returns the number of years since a book was published. The content of the DefiningExpression element is written in Entity SQL.

 <Function Name="GetYearsInPrint" ReturnType="Edm.Int32" >
       <Parameter Name="book" Type="BooksModel.Book" />
       <DefiningExpression>
         Year(CurrentDateTime()) - Year(cast(book.PublishedDate as DateTime))
       </DefiningExpression>
     </Function>

 

 

Dependent Element (CSDL)

The Dependent element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) is a child element to the ReferentialConstraint element and defines the dependent end of a referential constraint. A ReferentialConstraint element defines functionality that is similar to a referential integrity constraint in a relational database. In the same way that a column (or columns) from a database table can reference the primary key of another table, a property (or properties) of an entity type can reference the entity key of another entity type. The entity type that is referenced is called the principal end of the constraint. The entity type that references the principal end is called the dependent end of the constraint. PropertyRef elements are used to specify which keys reference the principal end.

The Dependent element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • PropertyRef (one or more elements)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements)

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the Dependent element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Role Yes The name of the entity type on the dependent end of the association.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the Dependent element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows a ReferentialConstraint element being used as part of the definition of the PublishedBy association. The PublisherId property of the Book entity type makes up the dependent end of the referential constraint.

 <Association Name="PublishedBy">
   <End Type="BooksModel.Book" Role="Book" Multiplicity="*" >
   </End>
   <End Type="BooksModel.Publisher" Role="Publisher" Multiplicity="1" />
   <ReferentialConstraint>
     <Principal Role="Publisher">
       <PropertyRef Name="Id" />
     </Principal>
     <Dependent Role="Book">
       <PropertyRef Name="PublisherId" />
     </Dependent>
   </ReferentialConstraint>
 </Association>

 

 

Documentation Element (CSDL)

The Documentation element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) can be used to provide information about an object that is defined in a parent element. In an .edmx file, when the Documentation element is a child of an element that appears as an object on the design surface of the EF Designer  (such as an entity, association, or property), the contents of the Documentation element will appear in the Visual Studio Properties window for the object.

The Documentation element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Summary: A brief description of the parent element. (zero or one element)
  • LongDescription: An extensive description of the parent element. (zero or one element)
  • Annotation elements. (zero or more elements)

Applicable Attributes

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the Documentation element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

Example

The following example shows the Documentation element as a child element of an EntityType element. If the snippet below were in the CSDL content of an .edmx file, the contents of the Summary and LongDescription elements would appear in the Visual Studio Properties window when you click on the Customer entity type.

 <EntityType Name="Customer">
    <Documentation>
      <Summary>Summary here.</Summary>
      <LongDescription>Long description here.</LongDescription>
    </Documentation>
    <Key>
      <PropertyRef Name="CustomerId" />
    </Key>
    <Property Type="Int32" Name="CustomerId" Nullable="false" />
    <Property Type="String" Name="Name" Nullable="false" />
 </EntityType>

 

 

End Element (CSDL)

The End element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) can be a child of the Association element or the AssociationSet element. In each case, the role of the End element is different and the applicable attributes are different.

End Element as a Child of the Association Element

An End element (as a child of the Association element) identifies the entity type on one end of an association and the number of entity type instances that can exist at that end of an association. Association ends are defined as part of an association; an association must have exactly two association ends. Entity type instances at one end of an association can be accessed through navigation properties or foreign keys if they are exposed on an entity type.  

An End element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one element)
  • OnDelete (zero or one element)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements)

Applicable Attributes

The following table describes the attributes that can be applied to the End element when it is the child of an Association element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Type Yes The name of the entity type at one end of the association.
Role No A name for the association end. If no name is provided, the name of the entity type on the association end will be used.
Multiplicity Yes 1, 0..1, or * depending on the number of entity type instances that can be at the end of the association.
1 indicates that exactly one entity type instance exists at the association end.
0..1 indicates that zero or one entity type instances exist at the association end.
* indicates that zero, one, or more entity type instances exist at the association end.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the End element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows an Association element that defines the CustomerOrders association. The Multiplicity values for each End of the association indicate that many Orders can be associated with a Customer, but only one Customer can be associated with an Order. Additionally, the OnDelete element indicates that all Orders that are related to a particular Customer and that have been loaded into the ObjectContext will be deleted if the Customer is deleted.

 <Association Name="CustomerOrders">
   <End Type="ExampleModel.Customer" Role="Customer" Multiplicity="1" />
   <End Type="ExampleModel.Order" Role="Order" Multiplicity="*">
         <OnDelete Action="Cascade" />
   </End>
 </Association>

 

End Element as a Child of the AssociationSet Element

The End element specifies one end of an association set. The AssociationSet element must contain two End elements. The information contained in an End element is used in mapping an association set to a data source.

An End element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one element)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements)

Note

Annotation elements must appear after all other child elements. Annotation elements are only allowed in CSDL v2 and later.

 

Applicable Attributes

The following table describes the attributes that can be applied to the End element when it is the child of an AssociationSet element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
EntitySet Yes The name of the EntitySet element that defines one end of the parent AssociationSet element. The EntitySet element must be defined in the same entity container as the parent AssociationSet element.
Role No The name of the association set end. If the Role attribute is not used, the name of the association set end will be the name of the entity set.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the End element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows an EntityContainer element with two AssociationSet elements, each with two End elements:

 <EntityContainer Name="BooksContainer" >
   <EntitySet Name="Books" EntityType="BooksModel.Book" />
   <EntitySet Name="Publishers" EntityType="BooksModel.Publisher" />
   <EntitySet Name="Authors" EntityType="BooksModel.Author" />
   <AssociationSet Name="PublishedBy" Association="BooksModel.PublishedBy">
     <End Role="Book" EntitySet="Books" />
     <End Role="Publisher" EntitySet="Publishers" />
   </AssociationSet>
   <AssociationSet Name="WrittenBy" Association="BooksModel.WrittenBy">
     <End Role="Book" EntitySet="Books" />
     <End Role="Author" EntitySet="Authors" />
   </AssociationSet>
 </EntityContainer>

 

 

EntityContainer Element (CSDL)

The EntityContainer element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) is a logical container for entity sets, association sets, and function imports. A conceptual model entity container maps to a storage model entity container through the EntityContainerMapping element. A storage model entity container describes the structure of the database: entity sets describe tables, association sets describe foreign key constraints, and function imports describe stored procedures in a database.

An EntityContainer element can have zero or one Documentation elements. If a Documentation element is present, it must precede all EntitySet, AssociationSet, and FunctionImport elements.

An EntityContainer element can have zero or more of the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • EntitySet
  • AssociationSet
  • FunctionImport
  • Annotation elements

You can extend an EntityContainer element to include the contents of another EntityContainer that is within the same namespace. To include the contents of another EntityContainer, in the referencing EntityContainer element, set the value of the Extends attribute to the name of the EntityContainer element that you want to include. All child elements of the included EntityContainer element will be treated as child elements of the referencing EntityContainer element.

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the Using element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the entity container.
Extends No The name of another entity container within the same namespace.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the EntityContainer element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows an EntityContainer element that defines three entity sets and two association sets.

 <EntityContainer Name="BooksContainer" >
   <EntitySet Name="Books" EntityType="BooksModel.Book" />
   <EntitySet Name="Publishers" EntityType="BooksModel.Publisher" />
   <EntitySet Name="Authors" EntityType="BooksModel.Author" />
   <AssociationSet Name="PublishedBy" Association="BooksModel.PublishedBy">
     <End Role="Book" EntitySet="Books" />
     <End Role="Publisher" EntitySet="Publishers" />
   </AssociationSet>
   <AssociationSet Name="WrittenBy" Association="BooksModel.WrittenBy">
     <End Role="Book" EntitySet="Books" />
     <End Role="Author" EntitySet="Authors" />
   </AssociationSet>
 </EntityContainer>

 

 

EntitySet Element (CSDL)

The EntitySet element in conceptual schema definition language is a logical container for instances of an entity type and instances of any type that is derived from that entity type. The relationship between an entity type and an entity set is analogous to the relationship between a row and a table in a relational database. Like a row, an entity type defines a set of related data, and, like a table, an entity set contains instances of that definition. An entity set provides a construct for grouping entity type instances so that they can be mapped to related data structures in a data source.  

More than one entity set for a particular entity type may be defined.

Note

The EF Designer does not support conceptual models that contain multiple entity sets per type.

 

The EntitySet element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation Element (zero or one elements allowed)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements allowed)

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the EntitySet element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the entity set.
EntityType Yes The fully-qualified name of the entity type for which the entity set contains instances.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the EntitySet element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows an EntityContainer element with three EntitySet elements:

 <EntityContainer Name="BooksContainer" >
   <EntitySet Name="Books" EntityType="BooksModel.Book" />
   <EntitySet Name="Publishers" EntityType="BooksModel.Publisher" />
   <EntitySet Name="Authors" EntityType="BooksModel.Author" />
   <AssociationSet Name="PublishedBy" Association="BooksModel.PublishedBy">
     <End Role="Book" EntitySet="Books" />
     <End Role="Publisher" EntitySet="Publishers" />
   </AssociationSet>
   <AssociationSet Name="WrittenBy" Association="BooksModel.WrittenBy">
     <End Role="Book" EntitySet="Books" />
     <End Role="Author" EntitySet="Authors" />
   </AssociationSet>
 </EntityContainer>

 

It is possible to define multiple entity sets per type (MEST). The following example defines an entity container with two entity sets for the Book entity type:

 <EntityContainer Name="BooksContainer" >
   <EntitySet Name="Books" EntityType="BooksModel.Book" />
   <EntitySet Name="FictionBooks" EntityType="BooksModel.Book" />
   <EntitySet Name="Publishers" EntityType="BooksModel.Publisher" />
   <EntitySet Name="Authors" EntityType="BooksModel.Author" />
   <AssociationSet Name="PublishedBy" Association="BooksModel.PublishedBy">
     <End Role="Book" EntitySet="Books" />
     <End Role="Publisher" EntitySet="Publishers" />
   </AssociationSet>
   <AssociationSet Name="BookAuthor" Association="BooksModel.BookAuthor">
     <End Role="Book" EntitySet="Books" />
     <End Role="Author" EntitySet="Authors" />
   </AssociationSet>
 </EntityContainer>

 

 

EntityType Element (CSDL)

The EntityType element represents the structure of a top-level concept, such as a customer or order, in a conceptual model. An entity type is a template for instances of entity types in an application. Each template contains the following information:

  • A unique name. (Required.)
  • An entity key that is defined by one or more properties. (Required.)
  • Properties for containing data. (Optional.)
  • Navigation properties that allow for navigation from one end of an association to the other end. (Optional.)

In an application, an instance of an entity type represents a specific object (such as a specific customer or order). Each instance of an entity type must have a unique entity key within an entity set.

Two entity type instances are considered equal only if they are of the same type and the values of their entity keys are the same.

An EntityType element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one element)
  • Key (zero or one element)
  • Property (zero or more elements)
  • NavigationProperty (zero or more elements)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements)

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the EntityType element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the entity type.
BaseType No The name of another entity type that is the base type of the entity type that is being defined.
Abstract No True or False, depending on whether the entity type is an abstract type.
OpenType No True or False depending on whether the entity type is an open entity type.
[!NOTE]
> The OpenType attribute is only applicable to entity types that are defined in conceptual models that are used with ADO.NET Data Services.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the EntityType element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows an EntityType element with three Property elements and two NavigationProperty elements:

 <EntityType Name="Book">
   <Key>
     <PropertyRef Name="ISBN" />
   </Key>
   <Property Type="String" Name="ISBN" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="String" Name="Title" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="Decimal" Name="Revision" Nullable="false" Precision="29" Scale="29" />
   <NavigationProperty Name="Publisher" Relationship="BooksModel.PublishedBy"
                       FromRole="Book" ToRole="Publisher" />
   <NavigationProperty Name="Authors" Relationship="BooksModel.WrittenBy"
                       FromRole="Book" ToRole="Author" />
 </EntityType>

 

 

EnumType Element (CSDL)

The EnumType element represents an enumerated type.

An EnumType element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one element)
  • Member (zero or more elements)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements)

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the EnumType element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the entity type.
IsFlags No True or False, depending on whether the enum type can be used as a set of flags. The default value is False..
UnderlyingType No Edm.Byte, Edm.Int16, Edm.Int32, Edm.Int64 or Edm.SByte defining the range of values of the type.   The default underlying type of enumeration elements is Edm.Int32..

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the EnumType element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows an EnumType element with three Member elements:

 <EnumType Name="Color" IsFlags=”false” UnderlyingTyp=”Edm.Byte”>
   <Member Name="Red" />
   <Member Name="Green" />
   <Member Name="Blue" />
 </EntityType>

 

 

Function Element (CSDL)

The Function element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) is used to define or declare functions in the conceptual model. A function is defined by using a DefiningExpression element.  

A Function element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one element)
  • Parameter (zero or more elements)
  • DefiningExpression (zero or one element)
  • ReturnType (Function) (zero or one element)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements)

A return type for a function must be specified with either the ReturnType (Function) element or the ReturnType attribute (see below), but not both. The possible return types are any EdmSimpleType, entity type, complex type, row type, or ref type (or a collection of one of these types).

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the Function element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the function.
ReturnType No The type returned by the function.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the Function element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example uses a Function element to define a function that returns the number of years since an instructor was hired.

 <Function Name="YearsSince" ReturnType="Edm.Int32">
   <Parameter Name="date" Type="Edm.DateTime" />
   <DefiningExpression>
     Year(CurrentDateTime()) - Year(date)
   </DefiningExpression>
 </Function>

 

 

FunctionImport Element (CSDL)

The FunctionImport element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) represents a function that is defined in the data source but available to objects through the conceptual model. For example, a Function element in the storage model can be used to represent a stored procedure in a database. A FunctionImport element in the conceptual model represents the corresponding function in an Entity Framework application and is mapped to the storage model function by using the FunctionImportMapping element. When the function is called in the application, the corresponding stored procedure is executed in the database.

The FunctionImport element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one elements allowed)
  • Parameter (zero or more elements allowed)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements allowed)
  • ReturnType (FunctionImport) (zero or more elements allowed)

One Parameter element should be defined for each parameter that the function accepts.

A return type for a function must be specified with either the ReturnType (FunctionImport) element or the ReturnType attribute (see below), but not both. The return type value must be a  collection of EdmSimpleType, EntityType, or ComplexType.

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the FunctionImport element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the imported function.
ReturnType No The type that the function returns. Do not use this attribute if the function does not return a value. Otherwise, the value must be a collection of ComplexType, EntityType, or EDMSimpleType.
EntitySet No If the function returns a collection of entity types, the value of the EntitySet must be the entity set to which the collection belongs. Otherwise, the EntitySet attribute must not be used.
IsComposable No If the value is set to true, the function is composable (Table-valued Function) and can be used in a LINQ query.  The default is false.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the FunctionImport element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows a FunctionImport element that accepts one parameter and returns a collection of entity types:

 <FunctionImport Name="GetStudentGrades"
                 EntitySet="StudentGrade"
                 ReturnType="Collection(SchoolModel.StudentGrade)">
        <Parameter Name="StudentID" Mode="In" Type="Int32" />
 </FunctionImport>

 

 

Key Element (CSDL)

The Key element is a child element of the EntityType element and defines an entity key (a property or a set of properties of an entity type that determine identity). The properties that make up an entity key are chosen at design time. The values of entity key properties must uniquely identify an entity type instance within an entity set at run time. The properties that make up an entity key should be chosen to guarantee uniqueness of instances in an entity set. The Key element defines an entity key by referencing one or more of the properties of an entity type.

The Key element can have the following child elements:

  • PropertyRef (one or more elements)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements)

Applicable Attributes

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the Key element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

Example

The example below defines an entity type named Book. The entity key is defined by referencing the ISBN property of the entity type.

 <EntityType Name="Book">
   <Key>
     <PropertyRef Name="ISBN" />
   </Key>
   <Property Type="String" Name="ISBN" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="String" Name="Title" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="Decimal" Name="Revision" Nullable="false" Precision="29" Scale="29" />
   <NavigationProperty Name="Publisher" Relationship="BooksModel.PublishedBy"
                       FromRole="Book" ToRole="Publisher" />
   <NavigationProperty Name="Authors" Relationship="BooksModel.WrittenBy"
                       FromRole="Book" ToRole="Author" />
 </EntityType>

 

The ISBN property is a good choice for the entity key because an International Standard Book Number (ISBN) uniquely identifies a book.

The following example shows an entity type (Author) that has an entity key that consists of two properties, Name and Address.

 <EntityType Name="Author">
   <Key>
     <PropertyRef Name="Name" />
     <PropertyRef Name="Address" />
   </Key>
   <Property Type="String" Name="Name" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="String" Name="Address" Nullable="false" />
   <NavigationProperty Name="Books" Relationship="BooksModel.WrittenBy"
                       FromRole="Author" ToRole="Book" />
 </EntityType>

 

Using Name and Address for the entity key is a reasonable choice, because two authors of the same name are unlikely to live at the same address. However, this choice for an entity key does not absolutely guarantee unique entity keys in an entity set. Adding a property, such as AuthorId, that could be used to uniquely identify an author would be recommended in this case.

 

Member Element (CSDL)

The Member element is a child element of the EnumType element and defines a member of the enumerated type.

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the FunctionImport element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the member.
Value No The value of the member. By default, the first member has the value 0, and the value of each successive enumerator is incremented by 1. Multiple members with the same values may exist.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the FunctionImport element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows an EnumType element with three Member elements:

 <EnumType Name="Color">
   <Member Name="Red" Value=”1”/>
   <Member Name="Green" Value=”3” />
   <Member Name="Blue" Value=”5”/>
 </EntityType>

 

 

A NavigationProperty element defines a navigation property, which provides a reference to the other end of an association. Unlike properties defined with the Property element, navigation properties do not define the shape and characteristics of data. They provide a way to navigate an association between two entity types.

Note that navigation properties are optional on both entity types at the ends of an association. If you define a navigation property on one entity type at the end of an association, you do not have to define a navigation property on the entity type at the other end of the association.

The data type returned by a navigation property is determined by the multiplicity of its remote association end. For example, suppose a navigation property, OrdersNavProp, exists on a Customer entity type and navigates a one-to-many association between Customer and Order. Because the remote association end for the navigation property has multiplicity many (*), its data type is a collection (of Order). Similarly, if a navigation property, CustomerNavProp, exists on the Order entity type, its data type would be Customer since the multiplicity of the remote end is one (1).

A NavigationProperty element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one element)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements)

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the NavigationProperty element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the navigation property.
Relationship Yes The name of an association that is within the scope of the model.
ToRole Yes The end of the association at which navigation ends. The value of the ToRole attribute must be the same as the value of one of the Role attributes defined on one of the association ends (defined in the AssociationEnd element).
FromRole Yes The end of the association from which navigation begins. The value of the FromRole attribute must be the same as the value of one of the Role attributes defined on one of the association ends (defined in the AssociationEnd element).

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the NavigationProperty element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example defines an entity type (Book) with two navigation properties (PublishedBy and WrittenBy):

 <EntityType Name="Book">
   <Key>
     <PropertyRef Name="ISBN" />
   </Key>
   <Property Type="String" Name="ISBN" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="String" Name="Title" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="Decimal" Name="Revision" Nullable="false" Precision="29" Scale="29" />
   <NavigationProperty Name="Publisher" Relationship="BooksModel.PublishedBy"
                       FromRole="Book" ToRole="Publisher" />
   <NavigationProperty Name="Authors" Relationship="BooksModel.WrittenBy"
                       FromRole="Book" ToRole="Author" />
 </EntityType>

 

 

OnDelete Element (CSDL)

The OnDelete element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) defines behavior that is connected with an association. If the Action attribute is set to Cascade on one end of an association, related entity types on the other end of the association are deleted when the entity type on the first end is deleted. If the association between two entity types is a primary key-to-primary key relationship, then a loaded dependent object is deleted when the principal object on the other end of the association is deleted regardless of the OnDelete specification.  

Note

The OnDelete element only affects the runtime behavior of an application; it does not affect behavior in the data source. The behavior defined in the data source should be the same as the behavior defined in the application.

 

An OnDelete element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one element)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements)

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the OnDelete element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Action Yes Cascade or None. If Cascade, dependent entity types will be deleted when the principal entity type is deleted. If None, dependent entity types will not be deleted when the principal entity type is deleted.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the Association element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows an Association element that defines the CustomerOrders association. The OnDelete element indicates that all Orders that are related to a particular Customer and have been loaded into the ObjectContext will be deleted when the Customer is deleted.

 <Association Name="CustomerOrders">
   <End Type="ExampleModel.Customer" Role="Customer" Multiplicity="1">
         <OnDelete Action="Cascade" />
   </End>
   <End Type="ExampleModel.Order" Role="Order" Multiplicity="*" />
 </Association>

 

 

Parameter Element (CSDL)

The Parameter element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) can be a child of the FunctionImport element or the Function element.

FunctionImport Element Application

A Parameter element (as a child of the FunctionImport element) is used to define input and output parameters for function imports that are declared in CSDL.

The Parameter element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one elements allowed)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements allowed)

Applicable Attributes

The following table describes the attributes that can be applied to the Parameter element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the parameter.
Type Yes The parameter type. The value must be an EDMSimpleType or a complex type that is within the scope of the model.
Mode No In, Out, or InOut depending on whether the parameter is an input, output, or input/output parameter.
MaxLength No The maximum allowed length of the parameter.
Precision No The precision of the parameter.
Scale No The scale of the parameter.
SRID No Spatial System Reference Identifier. Valid only for parameters of spatial types. For more information, see SRID and SRID (SQL Server).

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the Parameter element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows a FunctionImport element with one Parameter child element. The function accepts one input parameter and returns a collection of entity types.

 <FunctionImport Name="GetStudentGrades"
                 EntitySet="StudentGrade"
                 ReturnType="Collection(SchoolModel.StudentGrade)">
        <Parameter Name="StudentID" Mode="In" Type="Int32" />
 </FunctionImport>

 

Function Element Application

A Parameter element (as a child of the Function element) defines parameters for functions that are defined or declared in a conceptual model.

The Parameter element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one elements)
  • CollectionType (zero or one elements)
  • ReferenceType (zero or one elements)
  • RowType (zero or one elements)

Note

Only one of the CollectionType, ReferenceType, or RowType elements can be a child element of a Property element.

 

  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements allowed)

Note

Annotation elements must appear after all other child elements. Annotation elements are only allowed in CSDL v2 and later.

 

Applicable Attributes

The following table describes the attributes that can be applied to the Parameter element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the parameter.
Type No The parameter type. A parameter can be any of the following types (or collections of these types):
EdmSimpleType
entity type
complex type
row type
reference type
Nullable No True (the default value) or False depending on whether the property can have a null value.
DefaultValue No The default value of the property.
MaxLength No The maximum length of the property value.
FixedLength No True or False depending on whether the property value will be stored as a fixed length string.
Precision No The precision of the property value.
Scale No The scale of the property value.
SRID No Spatial System Reference Identifier. Valid only for properties of spatial types. For more information, see SRID and SRID (SQL Server).
Unicode No True or False depending on whether the property value will be stored as a Unicode string.
Collation No A string that specifies the collating sequence to be used in the data source.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the Parameter element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows a Function element that uses one Parameter child element to define a function parameter.

 <Function Name="GetYearsEmployed" ReturnType="Edm.Int32">
 <Parameter Name="Instructor" Type="SchoolModel.Person" />
   <DefiningExpression>
   Year(CurrentDateTime()) - Year(cast(Instructor.HireDate as DateTime))
   </DefiningExpression>
 </Function>

 

Principal Element (CSDL)

The Principal element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) is a child element to the ReferentialConstraint element that defines the principal end of a referential constraint. A ReferentialConstraint element defines functionality that is similar to a referential integrity constraint in a relational database. In the same way that a column (or columns) from a database table can reference the primary key of another table, a property (or properties) of an entity type can reference the entity key of another entity type. The entity type that is referenced is called the principal end of the constraint. The entity type that references the principal end is called the dependent end of the constraint. PropertyRef elements are used to specify which keys are referenced by the dependent end.

The Principal element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • PropertyRef (one or more elements)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements)

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the Principal element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Role Yes The name of the entity type on the principal end of the association.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the Principal element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows a ReferentialConstraint element that is part of the definition of the PublishedBy association. The Id property of the Publisher entity type makes up the principal end of the referential constraint.

 <Association Name="PublishedBy">
   <End Type="BooksModel.Book" Role="Book" Multiplicity="*" >
   </End>
   <End Type="BooksModel.Publisher" Role="Publisher" Multiplicity="1" />
   <ReferentialConstraint>
     <Principal Role="Publisher">
       <PropertyRef Name="Id" />
     </Principal>
     <Dependent Role="Book">
       <PropertyRef Name="PublisherId" />
     </Dependent>
   </ReferentialConstraint>
 </Association>

 

 

Property Element (CSDL)

The Property element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) can be a child of the EntityType element, the ComplexType element, or the RowType element.

EntityType and ComplexType Element Applications

Property elements (as children of EntityType or ComplexType elements) define the shape and characteristics of data that an entity type instance or complex type instance will contain. Properties in a conceptual model are analogous to properties that are defined on a class. In the same way that properties on a class define the shape of the class and carry information about objects, properties in a conceptual model define the shape of an entity type and carry information about entity type instances.

The Property element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation Element (zero or one elements allowed)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements allowed)

The following facets can be applied to a Property element: Nullable, DefaultValue, MaxLength, FixedLength, Precision, Scale, Unicode, Collation, ConcurrencyMode. Facets are XML attributes that provide information about how property values are stored in the data store.

Note

Facets can only be applied to properties of type EDMSimpleType.

 

Applicable Attributes

The following table describes the attributes that can be applied to the Property element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the property.
Type Yes The type of the property value. The property value type must be an EDMSimpleType or a complex type (indicated by a fully-qualified name) that is within scope of the model.
Nullable No True (the default value) or False depending on whether the property can have a null value.
[!NOTE]
> In the CSDL v1 a complex type property must have Nullable="False".
DefaultValue No The default value of the property.
MaxLength No The maximum length of the property value.
FixedLength No True or False depending on whether the property value will be stored as a fixed length string.
Precision No The precision of the property value.
Scale No The scale of the property value.
SRID No Spatial System Reference Identifier. Valid only for properties of spatial types. For more information, see SRID and SRID (SQL Server).
Unicode No True or False depending on whether the property value will be stored as a Unicode string.
Collation No A string that specifies the collating sequence to be used in the data source.
ConcurrencyMode No None (the default value) or Fixed. If the value is set to Fixed, the property value will be used in optimistic concurrency checks.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the Property element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows an EntityType element with three Property elements:

 <EntityType Name="Book">
   <Key>
     <PropertyRef Name="ISBN" />
   </Key>
   <Property Type="String" Name="ISBN" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="String" Name="Title" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="Decimal" Name="Revision" Nullable="false" Precision="29" Scale="29" />
   <NavigationProperty Name="Publisher" Relationship="BooksModel.PublishedBy"
                       FromRole="Book" ToRole="Publisher" />
   <NavigationProperty Name="Authors" Relationship="BooksModel.WrittenBy"
                       FromRole="Book" ToRole="Author" />
 </EntityType>

 

The following example shows a ComplexType element with five Property elements:

 <ComplexType Name="Address" >
   <Property Type="String" Name="StreetAddress" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="String" Name="City" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="String" Name="StateOrProvince" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="String" Name="Country" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="String" Name="PostalCode" Nullable="false" />
 </ComplexType>

 

RowType Element Application

Property elements (as the children of a RowType element) define the shape and characteristics of data that can be passed to or returned from a model-defined function.  

The Property element can have exactly one of the following child elements:

  • CollectionType
  • ReferenceType
  • RowType

The Property element can have any number child annotation elements.

Note

Annotation elements are only allowed in CSDL v2 and later.

 

Applicable Attributes

The following table describes the attributes that can be applied to the Property element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the property.
Type Yes The type of the property value.
Nullable No True (the default value) or False depending on whether the property can have a null value.
[!NOTE]
> In CSDL v1 a complex type property must have Nullable="False".
DefaultValue No The default value of the property.
MaxLength No The maximum length of the property value.
FixedLength No True or False depending on whether the property value will be stored as a fixed length string.
Precision No The precision of the property value.
Scale No The scale of the property value.
SRID No Spatial System Reference Identifier. Valid only for properties of spatial types. For more information, see SRID and SRID (SQL Server).
Unicode No True or False depending on whether the property value will be stored as a Unicode string.
Collation No A string that specifies the collating sequence to be used in the data source.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the Property element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows Property elements used to define the shape of the return type of a model-defined function.

 <Function Name="LastNamesAfter">
   <Parameter Name="someString" Type="Edm.String" />
   <ReturnType>
    <CollectionType>
      <RowType>
        <Property Name="FirstName" Type="Edm.String" Nullable="false" />
        <Property Name="LastName" Type="Edm.String" Nullable="false" />
      </RowType>
    </CollectionType>
   </ReturnType>
   <DefiningExpression>
             SELECT VALUE ROW(p.FirstName, p.LastName)
             FROM SchoolEntities.People AS p
             WHERE p.LastName &gt;= somestring
   </DefiningExpression>
 </Function>

 

 

PropertyRef Element (CSDL)

The PropertyRef element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) references a property of an entity type to indicate that the property will perform one of the following roles:

  • Part of the entity's key (a property or a set of properties of an entity type that determine identity). One or more PropertyRef elements can be used to define an entity key.
  • The dependent or principal end of a referential constraint.

The PropertyRef element can only have annotation elements (zero or more) as child elements.

Note

Annotation elements are only allowed in CSDL v2 and later.

 

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the PropertyRef element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Name Yes The name of the referenced property.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the PropertyRef element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The example below defines an entity type (Book). The entity key is defined by referencing the ISBN property of the entity type.

 <EntityType Name="Book">
   <Key>
     <PropertyRef Name="ISBN" />
   </Key>
   <Property Type="String" Name="ISBN" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="String" Name="Title" Nullable="false" />
   <Property Type="Decimal" Name="Revision" Nullable="false" Precision="29" Scale="29" />
   <NavigationProperty Name="Publisher" Relationship="BooksModel.PublishedBy"
                       FromRole="Book" ToRole="Publisher" />
   <NavigationProperty Name="Authors" Relationship="BooksModel.WrittenBy"
                       FromRole="Book" ToRole="Author" />
 </EntityType>

 

In the next example, two PropertyRef elements are used to indicate that two properties (Id and PublisherId) are the principal and dependent ends of a referential constraint.

 <Association Name="PublishedBy">
   <End Type="BooksModel.Book" Role="Book" Multiplicity="*" >
   </End>
   <End Type="BooksModel.Publisher" Role="Publisher" Multiplicity="1" />
   <ReferentialConstraint>
     <Principal Role="Publisher">
       <PropertyRef Name="Id" />
     </Principal>
     <Dependent Role="Book">
       <PropertyRef Name="PublisherId" />
     </Dependent>
   </ReferentialConstraint>
 </Association>

 

 

ReferenceType Element (CSDL)

The ReferenceType element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) specifies a reference to an entity type. The ReferenceType element can be a child of the following elements:

  • ReturnType (Function)
  • Parameter
  • CollectionType

The ReferenceType element is used when defining a parameter or return type for a function.

A ReferenceType element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one element)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements)

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes that can be applied to the ReferenceType element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Type Yes The name of the entity type being referenced.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the ReferenceType element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows the ReferenceType element used as a child of a Parameter element in a model-defined function that accepts a reference to a Person entity type:

 <Function Name="GetYearsEmployed" ReturnType="Edm.Int32">
   <Parameter Name="instructor">
     <ReferenceType Type="SchoolModel.Person" />
   </Parameter>
   <DefiningExpression>
   Year(CurrentDateTime()) - Year(cast(instructor.HireDate as DateTime))
   </DefiningExpression>
 </Function>

 

The following example shows the ReferenceType element used as a child of a ReturnType (Function) element in a model-defined function that returns a reference to a Person entity type:

 <Function Name="GetPersonReference">
     <Parameter Name="p" Type="SchoolModel.Person" />
     <ReturnType>
         <ReferenceType Type="SchoolModel.Person" />
     </ReturnType>
     <DefiningExpression>
           REF(p)
     </DefiningExpression>
 </Function>

 

 

ReferentialConstraint Element (CSDL)

A ReferentialConstraint element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) defines functionality that is similar to a referential integrity constraint in a relational database. In the same way that a column (or columns) from a database table can reference the primary key of another table, a property (or properties) of an entity type can reference the entity key of another entity type. The entity type that is referenced is called the principal end of the constraint. The entity type that references the principal end is called the dependent end of the constraint.

If a foreign key that is exposed on one entity type references a property on another entity type, the ReferentialConstraint element defines an association between the two entity types. Because the ReferentialConstraint element provides information about how two entity types are related, no corresponding AssociationSetMapping element is necessary in the mapping specification language (MSL). An association between two entity types that do not have foreign keys exposed must have a corresponding AssociationSetMapping element in order to map association information to the data source.

If a foreign key is not exposed on an entity type, the ReferentialConstraint element can only define a primary key-to-primary key constraint between the entity type and another entity type.

A ReferentialConstraint element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one element)
  • Principal (exactly one element)
  • Dependent (exactly one element)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements)

Applicable Attributes

The ReferentialConstraint element can have any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes). However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

Example

The following example shows a ReferentialConstraint element being used as part of the definition of the PublishedBy association.

 <Association Name="PublishedBy">
   <End Type="BooksModel.Book" Role="Book" Multiplicity="*" >
   </End>
   <End Type="BooksModel.Publisher" Role="Publisher" Multiplicity="1" />
   <ReferentialConstraint>
     <Principal Role="Publisher">
       <PropertyRef Name="Id" />
     </Principal>
     <Dependent Role="Book">
       <PropertyRef Name="PublisherId" />
     </Dependent>
   </ReferentialConstraint>
 </Association>

 

 

ReturnType (Function) Element (CSDL)

The ReturnType (Function) element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) specifies the return type for a function that is defined in a Function element. A function return type can also be specified with a ReturnType attribute.

Return types can be any EdmSimpleType, entity type, complex type, row type, ref type, or a collection of one of these types.

The return type of a function can be specified with either the Type attribute of the ReturnType (Function) element, or with one of the following child elements:

  • CollectionType
  • ReferenceType
  • RowType

Note

A model will not validate if you specify a function return type with both the Type attribute of the ReturnType (Function) element and one of the child elements.

 

Applicable Attributes

The following table describes the attributes that can be applied to the ReturnType (Function) element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
ReturnType No The type returned by the function.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the ReturnType (Function) element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example uses a Function element to define a function that returns the number of years a book has been in print. Note that the return type is specified by the Type attribute of a ReturnType (Function) element.

 <Function Name="GetYearsInPrint">
   <ReturnType Type=="Edm.Int32">
   <Parameter Name="book" Type="BooksModel.Book" />
   <DefiningExpression>
    Year(CurrentDateTime()) - Year(cast(book.PublishedDate as DateTime))
   </DefiningExpression>
 </Function>

 

 

ReturnType (FunctionImport) Element (CSDL)

The ReturnType (FunctionImport) element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) specifies the return type for a function that is defined in a FunctionImport element. A function return type can also be specified with a ReturnType attribute.

Return types can be any collection of entity type, complex type,or EdmSimpleType,

The return type of a function is specified with the Type attribute of the ReturnType (FunctionImport) element.

Applicable Attributes

The following table describes the attributes that can be applied to the ReturnType (FunctionImport) element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Type No The type that the function returns. The value must be a collection of ComplexType, EntityType, or EDMSimpleType.
EntitySet No If the function returns a collection of entity types, the value of the EntitySet must be the entity set to which the collection belongs. Otherwise, the EntitySet attribute must not be used.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the ReturnType (FunctionImport) element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example uses a FunctionImport that returns books and publishers. Note that the function returns two result sets and therefore two ReturnType (FunctionImport) elements are specified.

 <FunctionImport Name="GetBooksAndPublishers">
   <ReturnType Type=="Collection(BooksModel.Book )" EntitySet=”Books”>
   <ReturnType Type=="Collection(BooksModel.Publisher)" EntitySet=”Publishers”>
 </FunctionImport>

 

 

RowType Element (CSDL)

A RowType element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) defines an unnamed structure as a parameter or return type for a function defined in the conceptual model.

A RowType element can be the child of the following elements:

  • CollectionType
  • Parameter
  • ReturnType (Function)

A RowType element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Property (one or more)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more)

Applicable Attributes

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the RowType element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

Example

The following example shows a model-defined function that uses a CollectionType element to specify that the function returns a collection of rows (as specified in the RowType element).

 <Function Name="LastNamesAfter">
   <Parameter Name="someString" Type="Edm.String" />
   <ReturnType>
    <CollectionType>
      <RowType>
        <Property Name="FirstName" Type="Edm.String" Nullable="false" />
        <Property Name="LastName" Type="Edm.String" Nullable="false" />
      </RowType>
    </CollectionType>
   </ReturnType>
   <DefiningExpression>
             SELECT VALUE ROW(p.FirstName, p.LastName)
             FROM SchoolEntities.People AS p
             WHERE p.LastName &gt;= somestring
   </DefiningExpression>
 </Function>

Schema Element (CSDL)

The Schema element is the root element of a conceptual model definition. It contains definitions for the objects, functions, and containers that make up a conceptual model.

The Schema element may contain zero or more of the following child elements:

  • Using
  • EntityContainer
  • EntityType
  • EnumType
  • Association
  • ComplexType
  • Function

A Schema element may contain zero or one Annotation elements.

Note

The Function element and annotation elements are only allowed in CSDL v2 and later.

 

The Schema element uses the Namespace attribute to define the namespace for the entity type, complex type, and association objects in a conceptual model. Within a namespace, no two objects can have the same name. Namespaces can span multiple Schema elements and multiple .csdl files.

A conceptual model namespace is different from the XML namespace of the Schema element. A conceptual model namespace (as defined by the Namespace attribute) is a logical container for entity types, complex types, and association types. The XML namespace (indicated by the xmlns attribute) of a Schema element is the default namespace for child elements and attributes of the Schema element. XML namespaces of the form https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/YYYY/MM/edm (where YYYY and MM represent a year and month respectively) are reserved for CSDL. Custom elements and attributes cannot be in namespaces that have this form.

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes can be applied to the Schema element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Namespace Yes The namespace of the conceptual model. The value of the Namespace attribute is used to form the fully qualified name of a type. For example, if an EntityType named Customer is in the Simple.Example.Model namespace, then the fully qualified name of the EntityType is SimpleExampleModel.Customer.
The following strings cannot be used as the value for the Namespace attribute: System, Transient, or Edm. The value for the Namespace attribute cannot be the same as the value for the Namespace attribute in the SSDL Schema element.
Alias No An identifier used in place of the namespace name. For example, if an EntityType named Customer is in the Simple.Example.Model namespace and the value of the Alias attribute is Model, then you can use Model.Customer as the fully qualified name of the EntityType.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the Schema element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows a Schema element that contains an EntityContainer element, two EntityType elements, and one Association element.

 <Schema xmlns="https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/2009/11/edm"
      xmlns:cg="https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/2009/11/codegeneration"
      xmlns:store="https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/2009/11/edm/EntityStoreSchemaGenerator"
       Namespace="ExampleModel" Alias="Self">
         <EntityContainer Name="ExampleModelContainer">
           <EntitySet Name="Customers"
                      EntityType="ExampleModel.Customer" />
           <EntitySet Name="Orders" EntityType="ExampleModel.Order" />
           <AssociationSet
                       Name="CustomerOrder"
                       Association="ExampleModel.CustomerOrders">
             <End Role="Customer" EntitySet="Customers" />
             <End Role="Order" EntitySet="Orders" />
           </AssociationSet>
         </EntityContainer>
         <EntityType Name="Customer">
           <Key>
             <PropertyRef Name="CustomerId" />
           </Key>
           <Property Type="Int32" Name="CustomerId" Nullable="false" />
           <Property Type="String" Name="Name" Nullable="false" />
           <NavigationProperty
                    Name="Orders"
                    Relationship="ExampleModel.CustomerOrders"
                    FromRole="Customer" ToRole="Order" />
         </EntityType>
         <EntityType Name="Order">
           <Key>
             <PropertyRef Name="OrderId" />
           </Key>
           <Property Type="Int32" Name="OrderId" Nullable="false" />
           <Property Type="Int32" Name="ProductId" Nullable="false" />
           <Property Type="Int32" Name="Quantity" Nullable="false" />
           <NavigationProperty
                    Name="Customer"
                    Relationship="ExampleModel.CustomerOrders"
                    FromRole="Order" ToRole="Customer" />
           <Property Type="Int32" Name="CustomerId" Nullable="false" />
         </EntityType>
         <Association Name="CustomerOrders">
           <End Type="ExampleModel.Customer"
                Role="Customer" Multiplicity="1" />
           <End Type="ExampleModel.Order"
                Role="Order" Multiplicity="*" />
           <ReferentialConstraint>
             <Principal Role="Customer">
               <PropertyRef Name="CustomerId" />
             </Principal>
             <Dependent Role="Order">
               <PropertyRef Name="CustomerId" />
             </Dependent>
           </ReferentialConstraint>
         </Association>
       </Schema>

 

 

TypeRef Element (CSDL)

The TypeRef element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) provides a reference to an existing named type. The TypeRef element can be a child of the CollectionType element, which is used to specify that a function has a collection as a parameter or return type.

A TypeRef element can have the following child elements (in the order listed):

  • Documentation (zero or one element)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements)

Applicable Attributes

The following table describes the attributes that can be applied to the TypeRef element. Note that the DefaultValue, MaxLength, FixedLength, Precision, Scale, Unicode, and Collation attributes are only applicable to EDMSimpleTypes.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Type No The name of the type being referenced.
Nullable No True (the default value) or False depending on whether the property can have a null value.
[!NOTE]
> In CSDL v1 a complex type property must have Nullable="False".
DefaultValue No The default value of the property.
MaxLength No The maximum length of the property value.
FixedLength No True or False depending on whether the property value will be stored as a fixed length string.
Precision No The precision of the property value.
Scale No The scale of the property value.
SRID No Spatial System Reference Identifier. Valid only for properties of spatial types. For more information, see SRID and SRID (SQL Server).
Unicode No True or False depending on whether the property value will be stored as a Unicode string.
Collation No A string that specifies the collating sequence to be used in the data source.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the CollectionType element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example shows a model-defined function that uses the TypeRef element (as a child of a CollectionType element) to specify that the function accepts a collection of Department entity types.

 <Function Name="GetAvgBudget">
      <Parameter Name="Departments">
          <CollectionType>
             <TypeRef Type="SchoolModel.Department"/>
          </CollectionType>
           </Parameter>
       <ReturnType Type="Collection(Edm.Decimal)"/>
       <DefiningExpression>
             SELECT VALUE AVG(d.Budget) FROM Departments AS d
       </DefiningExpression>
 </Function>

 

 

Using Element (CSDL)

The Using element in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) imports the contents of a conceptual model that exists in a different namespace. By setting the value of the Namespace attribute, you can refer to entity types, complex types, and association types that are defined in another conceptual model. More than one Using element can be a child of a Schema element.

Note

The Using element in CSDL does not function exactly like a using statement in a programming language. By importing a namespace with a using statement in a programming language, you do not affect objects in the original namespace. In CSDL, an imported namespace can contain an entity type that is derived from an entity type in the original namespace. This can affect entity sets declared in the original namespace.

 

The Using element can have the following child elements:

  • Documentation (zero or one elements allowed)
  • Annotation elements (zero or more elements allowed)

Applicable Attributes

The table below describes the attributes can be applied to the Using element.

Attribute Name Is Required Value
Namespace Yes The name of the imported namespace.
Alias Yes An identifier used in place of the namespace name. Although this attribute is required, it is not required that it be used in place of the namespace name to qualify object names.

 

Note

Any number of annotation attributes (custom XML attributes) may be applied to the Using element. However, custom attributes may not belong to any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL. The fully-qualified names for any two custom attributes cannot be the same.

 

Example

The following example demonstrates the Using element being used to import a namespace that is defined elsewhere. Note that the namespace for the Schema element shown is BooksModel. The Address property on the PublisherEntityType is a complex type that is defined in the ExtendedBooksModel namespace (imported with the Using element).

 <Schema xmlns="https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/2009/11/edm"
           xmlns:cg="https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/2009/11/codegeneration"
           xmlns:store="https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/2009/11/edm/EntityStoreSchemaGenerator"
           Namespace="BooksModel" Alias="Self">

     <Using Namespace="BooksModel.Extended" Alias="BMExt" />

 <EntityContainer Name="BooksContainer" >
       <EntitySet Name="Publishers" EntityType="BooksModel.Publisher" />
     </EntityContainer>

 <EntityType Name="Publisher">
       <Key>
         <PropertyRef Name="Id" />
       </Key>
       <Property Type="Int32" Name="Id" Nullable="false" />
       <Property Type="String" Name="Name" Nullable="false" />
       <Property Type="BMExt.Address" Name="Address" Nullable="false" />
     </EntityType>

 </Schema>

 

 

Annotation Attributes (CSDL)

Annotation attributes in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) are custom XML attributes in the conceptual model. In addition to having valid XML structure, the following must be true of annotation attributes:

  • Annotation attributes must not be in any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL.
  • More than one annotation attribute may be applied to a given CSDL element.
  • The fully-qualified names of any two annotation attributes must not be the same.

Annotation attributes can be used to provide extra metadata about the elements in a conceptual model. Metadata contained in annotation elements can be accessed at runtime by using classes in the System.Data.Metadata.Edm namespace.

Example

The following example shows an EntityType element with an annotation attribute (CustomAttribute). The example also shows an annotation element applied to the entity type element.

 <Schema Namespace="SchoolModel" Alias="Self"
         xmlns:annotation="https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/2009/02/edm/annotation"
         xmlns="https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/2009/11/edm">
   <EntityContainer Name="SchoolEntities" annotation:LazyLoadingEnabled="true">
     <EntitySet Name="People" EntityType="SchoolModel.Person" />
   </EntityContainer>
   <EntityType Name="Person" xmlns:p="http://CustomNamespace.com"
               p:CustomAttribute="Data here.">
     <Key>
       <PropertyRef Name="PersonID" />
     </Key>
     <Property Name="PersonID" Type="Int32" Nullable="false"
               annotation:StoreGeneratedPattern="Identity" />
     <Property Name="LastName" Type="String" Nullable="false"
               MaxLength="50" Unicode="true" FixedLength="false" />
     <Property Name="FirstName" Type="String" Nullable="false"
               MaxLength="50" Unicode="true" FixedLength="false" />
     <Property Name="HireDate" Type="DateTime" />
     <Property Name="EnrollmentDate" Type="DateTime" />
     <p:CustomElement>
       Custom metadata.
     </p:CustomElement>
   </EntityType>
 </Schema>

 

The following code retrieves the metadata in the annotation attribute and writes it to the console:

 EdmItemCollection collection = new EdmItemCollection("School.csdl");
 MetadataWorkspace workspace = new MetadataWorkspace();
 workspace.RegisterItemCollection(collection);
 EdmType contentType;
 workspace.TryGetType("Person", "SchoolModel", DataSpace.CSpace, out contentType);
 if (contentType.MetadataProperties.Contains("http://CustomNamespace.com:CustomAttribute"))
 {
     MetadataProperty annotationProperty =
         contentType.MetadataProperties["http://CustomNamespace.com:CustomAttribute"];
     object annotationValue = annotationProperty.Value;
     Console.WriteLine(annotationValue.ToString());
 }

 

The code above assumes that the School.csdl file is in the project's output directory and that you have added the following Imports and Using statements to your project:

 using System.Data.Metadata.Edm;

 

 

Annotation Elements (CSDL)

Annotation elements in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) are custom XML elements in the conceptual model. In addition to having valid XML structure, the following must be true of annotation elements:

  • Annotation elements must not be in any XML namespace that is reserved for CSDL.
  • More than one annotation element may be a child of a given CSDL element.
  • The fully-qualified names of any two annotation elements must not be the same.
  • Annotation elements must appear after all other child elements of a given CSDL element.

Annotation elements can be used to provide extra metadata about the elements in a conceptual model. Starting with the .NET Framework version 4, metadata contained in annotation elements can be accessed at runtime by using classes in the System.Data.Metadata.Edm namespace.

Example

The following example shows an EntityType element with an annotation element (CustomElement). The example also show an annotation attribute applied to the entity type element.

 <Schema Namespace="SchoolModel" Alias="Self"
         xmlns:annotation="https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/2009/02/edm/annotation"
         xmlns="https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/2009/11/edm">
   <EntityContainer Name="SchoolEntities" annotation:LazyLoadingEnabled="true">
     <EntitySet Name="People" EntityType="SchoolModel.Person" />
   </EntityContainer>
   <EntityType Name="Person" xmlns:p="http://CustomNamespace.com"
               p:CustomAttribute="Data here.">
     <Key>
       <PropertyRef Name="PersonID" />
     </Key>
     <Property Name="PersonID" Type="Int32" Nullable="false"
               annotation:StoreGeneratedPattern="Identity" />
     <Property Name="LastName" Type="String" Nullable="false"
               MaxLength="50" Unicode="true" FixedLength="false" />
     <Property Name="FirstName" Type="String" Nullable="false"
               MaxLength="50" Unicode="true" FixedLength="false" />
     <Property Name="HireDate" Type="DateTime" />
     <Property Name="EnrollmentDate" Type="DateTime" />
     <p:CustomElement>
       Custom metadata.
     </p:CustomElement>
   </EntityType>
 </Schema>

 

The following code retrieves the metadata in the annotation element and writes it to the console:

 EdmItemCollection collection = new EdmItemCollection("School.csdl");
 MetadataWorkspace workspace = new MetadataWorkspace();
 workspace.RegisterItemCollection(collection);
 EdmType contentType;
 workspace.TryGetType("Person", "SchoolModel", DataSpace.CSpace, out contentType);
 if (contentType.MetadataProperties.Contains("http://CustomNamespace.com:CustomElement"))
 {
     MetadataProperty annotationProperty =
         contentType.MetadataProperties["http://CustomNamespace.com:CustomElement"];
     object annotationValue = annotationProperty.Value;
     Console.WriteLine(annotationValue.ToString());
 }

 

The code above assumes that the School.csdl file is in the project's output directory and that you have added the following Imports and Using statements to your project:

 using System.Data.Metadata.Edm;

 

 

Conceptual Model Types (CSDL)

Conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) supports a set of abstract primitive data types, called EDMSimpleTypes, that define properties in a conceptual model. EDMSimpleTypes are proxies for primitive data types that are supported in the storage or hosting environment.

The table below lists the primitive data types that are supported by CSDL. The table also lists the facets that can be applied to each EDMSimpleType.

EDMSimpleType Description Applicable Facets
Edm.Binary Contains binary data. MaxLength, FixedLength, Nullable, Default
Edm.Boolean Contains the value true or false. Nullable, Default
Edm.Byte Contains an unsigned 8-bit integer value. Precision, Nullable, Default
Edm.DateTime Represents a date and time. Precision, Nullable, Default
Edm.DateTimeOffset Contains a date and time as an offset in minutes from GMT. Precision, Nullable, Default
Edm.Decimal Contains a numeric value with fixed precision and scale. Precision, Nullable, Default
Edm.Double Contains a floating point number with 15-digit precision Precision, Nullable, Default
Edm.Float Contains a floating point number with 7-digit precision. Precision, Nullable, Default
Edm.Guid Contains a 16-byte unique identifier. Precision, Nullable, Default
Edm.Int16 Contains a signed 16-bit integer value. Precision, Nullable, Default
Edm.Int32 Contains a signed 32-bit integer value. Precision, Nullable, Default
Edm.Int64 Contains a signed 64-bit integer value. Precision, Nullable, Default
Edm.SByte Contains a signed 8-bit integer value. Precision, Nullable, Default
Edm.String Contains character data. Unicode, FixedLength, MaxLength, Collation, Precision, Nullable, Default
Edm.Time Contains a time of day. Precision, Nullable, Default
Edm.Geography Nullable, Default, SRID
Edm.GeographyPoint Nullable, Default, SRID
Edm.GeographyLineString Nullable, Default, SRID
Edm.GeographyPolygon Nullable, Default, SRID
Edm.GeographyMultiPoint Nullable, Default, SRID
Edm.GeographyMultiLineString Nullable, Default, SRID
Edm.GeographyMultiPolygon Nullable, Default, SRID
Edm.GeographyCollection Nullable, Default, SRID
Edm.Geometry Nullable, Default, SRID
Edm.GeometryPoint Nullable, Default, SRID
Edm.GeometryLineString Nullable, Default, SRID
Edm.GeometryPolygon Nullable, Default, SRID
Edm.GeometryMultiPoint Nullable, Default, SRID
Edm.GeometryMultiLineString Nullable, Default, SRID
Edm.GeometryMultiPolygon Nullable, Default, SRID
Edm.GeometryCollection Nullable, Default, SRID

Facets (CSDL)

Facets in conceptual schema definition language (CSDL) represent constraints on properties of entity types and complex types. Facets appear as XML attributes on the following CSDL elements:

  • Property
  • TypeRef
  • Parameter

The following table describes the facets that are supported in CSDL. All facets are optional. Some facets listed below are used by the Entity Framework when generating a database from a conceptual model.

Note

For information about data types in a conceptual model, see Conceptual Model Types (CSDL).

Facet Description Applies to Used for the database generation Used by the runtime
Collation Specifies the collating sequence (or sorting sequence) to be used when performing comparison and ordering operations on values of the property. Edm.String Yes No
ConcurrencyMode Indicates that the value of the property should be used for optimistic concurrency checks. All EDMSimpleType properties No Yes
Default Specifies the default value of the property if no value is supplied upon instantiation. All EDMSimpleType properties Yes Yes
FixedLength Specifies whether the length of the property value can vary. Edm.Binary, Edm.String Yes No
MaxLength Specifies the maximum length of the property value. Edm.Binary, Edm.String Yes No
Nullable Specifies whether the property can have a null value. All EDMSimpleType properties Yes Yes
Precision For properties of type Decimal, specifies the number of digits a property value can have. For properties of type Time, DateTime, and DateTimeOffset, specifies the number of digits for the fractional part of seconds of the property value. Edm.DateTime, Edm.DateTimeOffset, Edm.Decimal, Edm.Time Yes No
Scale Specifies the number of digits to the right of the decimal point for the property value. Edm.Decimal Yes No
SRID Specifies the Spatial System Reference System ID. For more information, see SRID and SRID (SQL Server). Edm.Geography, Edm.GeographyPoint, Edm.GeographyLineString, Edm.GeographyPolygon, Edm.GeographyMultiPoint, Edm.GeographyMultiLineString, Edm.GeographyMultiPolygon, Edm.GeographyCollection, Edm.Geometry, Edm.GeometryPoint, Edm.GeometryLineString, Edm.GeometryPolygon, Edm.GeometryMultiPoint, Edm.GeometryMultiLineString, Edm.GeometryMultiPolygon, Edm.GeometryCollection No Yes
Unicode Indicates whether the property value is stored as Unicode. Edm.String Yes Yes

Note

When generating a database from a conceptual model, the Generate Database Wizard will recognize the value of the StoreGeneratedPattern attribute on a Property element if it is in the following namespace: https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/2009/02/edm/annotation. The supported values for the attribute are Identity and Computed. A value of Identity will produce a database column with an identity value that is generated in the database. A value of Computed will produce a column with a value that is computed in the database.

Example

The following example shows facets applied to the properties of an entity type:

 <EntityType Name="Product">
   <Key>
     <PropertyRef Name="ProductId" />
   </Key>
   <Property Type="Int32"
             Name="ProductId" Nullable="false"
             a:StoreGeneratedPattern="Identity"
    xmlns:a="https://schemas.microsoft.com/ado/2009/02/edm/annotation" />
   <Property Type="String"
             Name="ProductName"
             Nullable="false"
             MaxLength="50" />
   <Property Type="String"
             Name="Location"
             Nullable="true"
             MaxLength="25" />
 </EntityType>