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When you have code like this:

Something something = new Something();
BlahEntities b = new BlahEntities()    
b.AddToSomethingSet(something);
b.SaveChanges();

how do run that addition inside a transaction?

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3 Answers

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You can place your code within a Transaction scope

using(TransactionScope scope = new TransactionScope())
{
    // Your code
    scope.Complete(); //  To commit.
}

TransactionScope is in the System.Transactions namespace which is located in the assembly of the same name (which you may need to add manually to your project).

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I know that for LINQ to SQL, the data context will create a transaction for SubmitChanges() if there is no existing ambient transaction (TransactionScope is an "ambient" transaction). I haven't seen this documented for LINQ to Entities, but I have seen behavior to suggest that it's true for Entity Framework as well.

So as long as you use one SubmitChanges() (L2SQL) or SaveChanges() (Linq to Entities) for all the related changes, you should be OK without using TransactionScope. You need a TransactionScope when

  1. Saving multiple changes with multiple SubmitChanges/SaveChanges for one transaction.
  2. Updating multiple data sources within one transaction (e.g., Linq and ASP.NET membership SQL provider).
  3. Calling other methods that may do their own updates.

I've had trouble with nested TransactionScopes. They're supposed to work, and simple test cases work, but when I get into production code, the "inner" transaction seems to be the same object as the outer transaction. Symptoms include errors that are either "transaction committed, you can't use this transaction any more" or "this transaction object has already been disposed". The errors occur in the outer transaction after the inner transaction has done its work.

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Thanks cyloncat for the long description. What I'm doing is create the record, save it and create a file with the id of the record. Only when the creation of the files succeeds then I commit the transaction. Makes sense? – J. Pablo Fernández Jun 28 at 15:09
Yes, that's an excellent example of when and how to use a transaction. – Cylon Cat Jun 28 at 16:28
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The ObjectContext has a connection property that you can use to manage transactions.

using (var context = new BlahEntities())
using (var tx = context.BeginTransaction())
{
    // do db stuff here...
    tx.Commit();
}

In the case of an exception the transaction will be rolled back. Because the call to BeginTransaction() requires and open connection it makes sense to wrap the call to BeginTransaction possibly in an extension method.

public static DbTransaction BeginTransaction(this ObjectContext context)
{
    if (context.Connection.State != ConnectionState.Open)
    {
        context.Connection.Open();
    }
    return context.Connection.BeginTransaction();
}

One scenario where I believe this approach could be useful over TransactionScope, is when you have to access two datasources and only need transactional control over one of the connections. I think that in that case the TransactionScope will promote to a distributed transaction which might not be requiered.

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