On many sites/blogs I noticed that people, who want to explain linq mechanism, write Linq Queries and provide SQL translation for that. How can I get the translation for my own queries? I'm working with EF .Net 4.0 in VS2010. Is there a place (property or even some third-party tool) where I can see what they're being translated into?
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1Not a direct answer, but you should look at EFProf. Yes it's a commercial tool, but man is it awesome. (There are free ways to do it too, such as SQL Profiler)– vcsjonesDec 19, 2011 at 15:20
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That is exactly what I was looking for! Thank you, it works perfectly and I'm satisfied with 30-days trial :)– user1086396Dec 19, 2011 at 16:57
3 Answers
You can use the ObjectQuery.ToTraceString method:
var query = ...
string sql = ((System.Data.Objects.ObjectQuery)query).ToTraceString();
However, some shortcomings of this approach is that it will only show queries, not updates/inserts/deletes. Also, it won't reveal the parameters used.
If you need as much detail as possible from the query then use the SQL Server Profiler as Neil suggested.
Julie Lerman has a good article with different options on MSDN: Profiling Database Activity in the Entity Framework. She mentions:
- ObjectQuery.ToTraceString method
- Visual Studio 2010 Ultimate's IntelliTrace
- EFTracingProvider
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Yeah, it's really limited and does not allow to translate a lot of queries that I would like to, thanks however :) Dec 19, 2011 at 16:55
The simplest method is to use SQL Profiler. I have found this a real god-send when it comes to debugging.
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Thanks, that is what I was looking for but I have only Express edition of MSSQL, so I would have to play with some more-advanced edition installer's scripts to get the profiler, so I just pass now as I'm in hurry. Dec 19, 2011 at 16:56