4

I'm trying to create a discriminator column. This column would hold one of the many statuses available. Like my code will show, each status has a name as well as a background color. Each status shares the same base class.

Here is my code:

public class Item
{
    public virtual int Id { get; set; }
    public virtual Status ItemStatus { get; set; }
}

public abstract class Status
{
    private readonly int _id;
    public static readonly Status Foo = new FooStatus(1);
    public static readonly Status Bar = new BarStatus(2);

    public Status()
    {

    }

    protected Status(int id)
    {
        _id = id;
    }

    public virtual int Id { get { return _id; } }
    public abstract string Name { get; }
    public abstract string BackgroundColor { get; }
}

public class FooStatus : Status
{
    public FooStatus()
    {

    }

    public FooStatus(int id)
        : base(id)
    {

    }

    public override string Name
    {
        get { return "Foo Status"; }
    }

    public override string BackgroundColor
    {
        get { return "White"; }
    }
}

public class BarStatus : Status
{
    public BarStatus()
    {

    }

    public BarStatus(int id)
        : base(id)
    {

    }

    public override string Name
    {
        get { return "Bar Status"; }
    }

    public override string BackgroundColor
    {
        get { return "Black"; }
    }
}

And here is my mapping:

public class ItemMap : ClassMap<Item>
{
    public ItemMap()
    {
        Id(x => x.Id).GeneratedBy.Identity();

        DiscriminateSubClassesOnColumn<int>("ItemStatus", 0).AlwaysSelectWithValue();
    }
}

Essentially, what I'd like is that if I set ItemStatus to Status.Foo then the ItemStatus column would have a value of 1. What I have now doesn't throw any exceptions, but it always inserts ItemStatus as 0.

This is the inserting code I'm using:

using (var session = sessionFactory.OpenSession())
using (var transaction = session.BeginTransaction())
{
    var item = new Item
    {
        ItemStatus = Status.Foo
    };
    session.Save(item);
    transaction.Commit();

    var firstItem = session.Get<Item>(1);
    Console.WriteLine(firstItem.ItemStatus.Name);
}

Where can I read up on this topic using FNH?

Before anyone suggests be to check on Google I did search several things but nowhere can I find a full example.

3 Answers 3

3

Your SubclassMap would look something like this:

public class FooStatusMap : SubclassMap<FooStatus>
{
    public FooStatusMap()
    {
        DiscriminatorValue(1);
    }
}

This is called "table-per-class-hierarchy," and you're right it doesn't look like there are many resources on it out there.

I believe if you don't call DiscriminatorValue in a SubclassMap, NHibernate attempts to discriminate by looking at the name of the subclass being mapped and seeing if it matches up with the value in the discriminator column.

8
  • 1
    Ah, I missed that. When I create a subclass map for each status NHibernate still inserts 0 as my ItemStatus. This must be due to the fact that I set the baseClassDiscriminator to 0. However, if I remove the baseClassDiscriminator NHibernate throws exception "Could not format discriminator value to SQL string of entity NHibernateDiscriminator.Domain.Item" when building my configuration.
    – User
    Jul 31, 2011 at 2:47
  • @User: Interesting. I will set up this mapping and see if I can duplicate it. Jul 31, 2011 at 2:53
  • @User: In the database, is the datatype an integer? Jul 31, 2011 at 3:14
  • The database data type is an integer. Think it gets set by using DiscriminateSubClassesOnColumn*<int>*
    – User
    Jul 31, 2011 at 3:15
  • @User: Actually, looking over your code again you need to define a mapping for the base Status type, and put the DiscriminateSubClassesOnColumn code there (not in ItemMap). Then define a subclass map for each sub type. Jul 31, 2011 at 3:27
0

I wouldnt write submaps for all the subclasses you can just do this instead

public class FooMap: ClassMap<T>
{
//other mapping
DiscriminateSubClassesOnColumn("DiscriminatorColumn")
.SubClass<Foo1>(m => { })
.SubClass<Foo2>(m => { })
.SubClass<Foo3>(m => { });
}

Hope that helps

1
  • 1
    My initial implementation was using this approach, but it's obsolete.
    – User
    Aug 1, 2011 at 14:38
0

If you're open to the Discriminator column having the class names of the derived classes, you can implement this via automapping.

In your session factory:

private static ISessionFactory CreateSessionFactory()
{
    var cfg = new MyMappingConfiguration();
    return Fluently.Configure()
    .Database(MsSqlConfiguration.MsSql2008.ConnectionString(c => c.FromConnectionStringWithKey("MyConnectionKey")).FormatSql().ShowSql()
            )
    .Mappings(m => m.AutoMappings.Add(AutoMap.AssemblyOf<Status>(cfg)
    .IncludeBase<Status>()
    .Conventions.Add<PrimaryKeyConvention>()))
    .BuildSessionFactory();
}

Then add the MyMappingConfiguration override:

public class MappingConfiguration : DefaultAutomappingConfiguration
{
    public override bool IsId(Member member)
    {
        return member.Name == member.DeclaringType.Name + "Id";
    }

    public override bool IsDiscriminated(Type type)
    {
        return true;
    }
}

Hope that h

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