EDM and Store functions exposed in LINQ
In this post Colin Meek and Diego Vega delve into some enhancements we are planning for LINQ to Entities, anyway over to them...
Entity Framework v1 customers preferring to write their queries using LINQ often hit a limitation on the range of functions and query patterns supported in LINQ to Entities. For some of those customers, having to resort to Entity SQL, or even to Entity SQL builder methods, feels awkward and reduces the appeal of Entity Framework.
There are two things we want to do in order to address this in future versions:
Expand the range of patterns and standard BCL methods we recognize in LINQ expressions.
Provide an extensibility mechanism that people can use to map arbitrary CLR methods to appropriate server and EDM functions.
This blog post expands on the second approach:
It is actually possible for us to improve our LINQ implementation so that all functions defined in the EDM and in the store, and even user defined functions, can be mapped to CLR methods with homologous signatures.
Design
Problem space
There are multiple dimensions to the problem space we want to address:
Functions can be defined in either the conceptual or the storage space
Functions can be defined in either the manifest, or just declared in the model
Functions can be mapped to either static CLR methods or to instance methods on the ObjectContext
This feature specifically targets composable functions
How it looks like: EdmFunctionAttribute
The basis of the extensibility mechanism is a new method-level attribute that carry function mapping information. Here is the basic signature of the attribute’s constructor:
public EdmFunctionAttribute(string namespaceName, string functionName)
The namespaceName parameter indicates the namespace for the function in metadata (i.e. “EDM” or “SQLSERVER”, or other store provider namespace). The functionName parameter takes the name of the function itself.
The following example could be product code or customer code applying the attribute on an extension method (it could be a regular static function) in order to map it to the standard deviation SQL Server function:
public static class SqlFunctions
{
[EdmFunction("SqlServer", "stdev")]
public static double? StandardDeviation(this IEnumerable<int?> source)
{
throw EntityUtil.NotSupported(
System.Data.Entity.Strings.ELinq_EdmFunctionDirectCall);
}
}
Notice that while this method can’t be called directly it can be used in a query like this:
var query =
from p in context.Products
where !p.Discontinued
group p by p.Category into g
select g.Select(each => each.ReorderLevel).StandardDeviation();
The following example shows how the canonical DiffYear function is mapped:
public static class EntityFunctions
{
[EdmFunction("EDM", "DiffYears")]
public static Int32? DiffYears(DateTime? arg1, DateTime? arg2)
{
throw EntityUtil.NotSupported(System.Data.Entity.Strings.ELinq_EdmFunctionDirectCall);
}
}
Usage is:
var query =
from p in context.Products
where EntityFunctions.DiffYears(DateTime.Today, p.CreationDate) < 5
select p;
The following example shows how a user defined function defined in SQL Server can be mapped:
public static class MyCustomFunctions
{
[EdmFunction("SqlServer", "MyFunction")]
public static Int32? MyFunction(string myArg)
{
throw new NotSupportedException("Direct calls not supported");
}
}
Convention based function name
We can establish that by convention the name of the CLR function defines the value of the functionName parameter. That makes the functionName parameter in the EdmFunctionAttribute optional.
EdmFunctionNamespaceAttribute
To avoid having to always specify the namespaceName for each function, we define a new class-level attribute named EdmFunctionNamespaceAttribute that would define the namespace mapping globally for a given class:
public EdmFunctionNamespaceAttribute(string namespaceName)
Using EdmFunctionNamespaceAttribute and the convention based constructor:
[EdmFunctionNamespace("EDM")]
public static class EdmMethods
{
[EdmFunction]
public static Int32? DiffYears(DateTime? arg1, DateTime? arg2)
{
throw EntityUtil.NotSupported(
System.Data.Entity.Strings.ELinq_EdmFunctionDirectCall);
}
}
How it works
When a method with the EdmFunction attribute is detected within a LINQ query expression, its treatment is identical to that of a function within an Entity-SQL query. Overload resolution is performed with respect to the EDM types (not CLR types) of the function arguments. Ambiguous overloads, missing functions or lack of overloads result in an exception. In addition, the return type of the method must be validated. If the CLR return type does not have an implicit cast to the appropriate EDM type, the translation will fail.
Instance methods on the ObjectContext will be supported as well. This allows the method to bootstrap itself and trigger direct evaluation, as in the following example (definition of the method and sample query):
public static class MyObjectContext : ObjectContext
{
// Method definition
[EdmFunction("edm", "floor")]
public double? Floor(double? value)
{
return this.QueryProvider.Execute<double?>(Expression.Call(
Expression.Constant(this),
(MethodInfo)MethodInfo.GetCurrentMethod(),
Expression.Constant(value, typeof(double?))));
}
}
…
// evaluated in the store!
context.Floor(0.1);
Without the ObjectContext, the function cannot reach the store! To support this style of bootstrapping, the context needs to expose the LINQ query provider. For this reason, we now expose a “QueryProvider” property on the ObjectContext. This provider includes the necessary surface to construct or execute a query given a LINQ expression.
public class ObjectContext
{
public IQueryProvider QueryProvider { get; }
}
If such a method is encountered inline in another query, then we must validate that the instance argument (MethodCallExpression.Object) is the correct context, but the instance is otherwise ignored:
// positive
var q1 = from p in context.Products select context.Floor(p.Price);
// negative
var q2 = from p in context.Products select context2.Floor(p.Price);
A function proxy can sometimes bootstrap itself without an explicit context, e.g. when an input argument is itself an IQueryable:
public static class SqlFunctions
{
[EdmFunction("SqlServer", "stdev")]
public static double? StandardDeviation(this IQueryable<int?> source)
{
return source.Provider.Execute<double?>(Expression.Call(
(MethodInfo)MethodInfo.GetCurrentMethod(),
Expression.Constant(source)));
}
}
Nullability considerations
Particularly for functions taking collections, we will need to provide overloads for nullable and non-nullable elements. We don’t want to require awkward constructions like:
var query = (from p in products select (int?)p.ReorderLevel).StandardDeviation();
Tool for Generating the Functions
We created a simple internal tool that generates the classes that represent all the EDM canonical function and the SQL Server store functions. The tool will take the function definitions from Metadata and generate the appropriate function stubs/implementations.
The tool will be outside the product and will be run on demand. We expect to make a version of this tool available for provider writers together with the provider samples.
Naming
The methods will be in the following classes:
Namespace | Class name |
System.Data.Objects | EntityFunctions |
System.Data.Objects.SqlClient | SqlFunctions |
Note: The equivalent class in LINQ to SQL is System.Data.Linq.SqlClient.SqlMethods.
The method names will correspond to the name of the EDM/SQL function they represent. The argument names will correspond to the argument names of the EDM/SQL functions as retrieved by the metadata.
The recommendation for provider writers will be to include a similar static class in a namespace of the following form:
System.Data.Objects.[Standard provider namespace].[Standard provider prefix]Functions
Overloads and Implementation
Non-aggregate Functions
For each non-aggregate function we create an overload with all inputs type as nullable of the CLR equivalent of their EDM primitive type, and the return type nullable of the CLR equivalent of their EDM primitive type.
The implementation of the functions (what gets executed if the function is invoked outside an expression tree) will be to throw a NotSupportedException.
Example:
public static class EntityFunctions
{
[EdmFunction("EDM", "DiffYears")]
public static Int32? DiffYears(DateTime? arg1, DateTime? arg2)
{
throw EntityUtil.NotSupported(System.Data.Entity.Strings.ELinq_EdmFunctionDirectCall);
}
}
public static class SqlFunctions
{
[EdmFunction("SqlServer", "DiffYears")]
public static Int32? DiffYears(DateTime? arg1, DateTime? arg2)
{
throw EntityUtil.NotSupported(System.Data.Entity.Strings.ELinq_EdmFunctionDirectCall);
}
}
Aggregate Functions
For each aggregate function we will provide two overloads, one with IEnumerable<Nullable<T>> and another one with IEnumerable<T>, where T is the CLR equivalent of the EDM primitive type of the input. The implementations of these will check whether the input is IQueryable in which case it will implement the self-bootstrapping.
Example:
[EdmFunction("EDM", "VARP")]
public static double? VarP(IEnumerable<int> arg1)
{
ObjectQuery<int> objectQuerySource = source as ObjectQuery<int>;
if (objectQuerySource != null)
{
return ((IQueryable)objectQuerySource).Provider.Execute<double?>(Expression.Call(
(MethodInfo)MethodInfo.GetCurrentMethod(),
Expression.Constant(source)));
}
throw EntityUtil.NotSupported(System.Data.Entity.Strings.ELinq_EdmFunctionDirectCall);
}
[EdmFunction("EDM", "VARP")]
public static double? VarP(IEnumerable<int?> arg1)
{
ObjectQuery<int?> objectQuerySource = source as ObjectQuery<int?>;
if (objectQuerySource != null)
{
return ((IQueryable)objectQuerySource).Provider.Execute<double?>(Expression.Call(
(MethodInfo)MethodInfo.GetCurrentMethod(),
Expression.Constant(source)));
}
throw EntityUtil.NotSupported(System.Data.Entity.Strings.ELinq_EdmFunctionDirectCall);
}
The Entity Framework team would love to hear your comments.
Alex James
Program Manager,
Entity Framework Team
This post is part of the transparent design exercise in the Entity Framework Team. To understand how it works and how your feedback will be used please look at this post.
Comments
Anonymous
October 08, 2008
Alex published today a description Colin and I wrote on a new feature the team has been working on forAnonymous
October 08, 2008
In the above examples, I did not see any example of functions returning out paramter and table values functions. In linq to sql I have functions returning a collection of entity which i can join against an existing query. Is that supported? Also it would be nice to get support for functions taking table, a new featured in sql server 2008? thks Zeeshan HiraniAnonymous
October 09, 2008
will the function defined on teh clr be available for use with entit sql as well?Anonymous
October 09, 2008
Zeeshan, Regarding TVFs and TVPs, we do want to support them with this mechanism, but we first need to build the capability in lower layers in the Entity Framework stack. At this point, we are not sure where this is going to land. Regarding your question on whether the CLR functions is going to be available from Entity SQL queries: if you are referring to arbitrary CLR functions being available in Entity SQL, the answer is no. That would require of a general mechanism to translate IL code to the query language of the database server. For instance, there is no general way to translate arbitrary IL code into T-SQL. If you are referring to the functions we are exposing to LINQ with this feature, they are already available to Entity SQL queries. Perhaps you are interested in having methods that have both a runtime CLR behavior and a corresponding semantics when used in queries. Then the answer is yes, that would be possible with this mechanism. Thanks, DiegoAnonymous
October 09, 2008
Thanks Diego for the explanation. I was looking for functions exposed to linq be also available for esql which u said it would be. Another question. Not sure if this is a right place to ask. Can we expect to retun partially filled entity cuz lot of times we do not need entire entity yet Ef requires a full entity set. Can the restriction be reduced to returning partially filled entity containing only entity key. Like in Linq to sql, I can return partially filled entity from stored procedure or dynamic sql as long as the reocrd set contains the column name that matches teh column name defined as the primary key on the entity. Also can we get relationship span to work with stored procedure as well?Anonymous
October 09, 2008
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 10, 2008
Zeeshan, I would like to understand more about the scenarios for "partially filled entities". I not sure what is exactly possible and in which circumstances this is more useful than a projection. I am aware that we support materializing arbitrary classes and using ExecuteQuery and Translate in LINQ to SQL, and I agree that is a useful feature. I will follow up on your other question on query span iwth stored procedures with someone that may know the answer.Anonymous
October 10, 2008
Stefan, At the language/CLR level, "extern" requires an implementation at type load time. What we are doing in this case does not really require any changes at lower levels of the framework. The idea of using this kind of "expression factory" method is interesting. It may result in code that is easier to read than building the expressions directly as we do. However, in the case of our internal code and generated code, the simpler expressions we get when we use the current way seem to be a better choice. Thanks, DiegoAnonymous
October 11, 2008
The comment has been removedAnonymous
December 01, 2008
Regarding the partially filled entities: you can define a function that will return entity refs instead of entities.Anonymous
January 08, 2009
Today the Entity Framework, and more specifically the Entity Data Model, have a limited notion of Functions.Anonymous
January 09, 2009
what about sprocs with table valued parameters? very useful for bulk-inserts!Anonymous
January 12, 2009
A while back I wrote a post that introduced the concept of Computed Properties . Since that time we’veAnonymous
April 11, 2012
CREATE function [dbo].[DevanagariToInt](@Value nchar(10)) returns int begin return cast(replace(replace(replace(replace(replace(replace(replace(replace(replace(replace( @Value , N'०', N'0') , N'१', N'1') , N'२', N'2') , N'३', N'3') , N'४', N'4') , N'५', N'5') , N'६', N'6') , N'७', N'7') , N'८', N'8') , N'९', N'9') as int) end This is my procedure and i want to use in entity framework i use in sql server in this way use Inventory1011 go select dbo.DevanagariToInt(companycode) as exp from CompanyMaster order by exp