I've been trying to POST an entity using Breezejs and WebAPI OData Controllers.
Here are the configurations:
config.Routes.MapODataRoute(
routeName: "odata",
routePrefix: "odata",
model: model,
batchHandler: new DefaultODataBatchHandler(GlobalConfiguration.DefaultServer));
Where the model is very straight forward:
public class ServiceMetadata
{
public int ServiceMetadataId { get; set; }
public string ServiceName { get; set; }
public string Description { get; set; }
public ObjectState? State { get; set; }
public DateTime? LastUpdated { get; set; }
}
And it is mapped through the default:
ODataModelBuilder modelBuilder = new ODataConventionModelBuilder();
The Client is also very simple taken using AngularJs and partially from the Todo example: http://www.breezejs.com/samples/todo-angular
breeze.config.initializeAdapterInstance("modelLibrary", "backingStore", true);
var serviceName = 'http://localhost:8081/odata/';
breeze.config.initializeAdapterInstances({ dataService: "OData" });
var manager = new breeze.EntityManager(serviceName);
manager.enableSaveQueuing(true);
The actual Posting is done using the default createEntity() method:
function createServiceMetadata(initialValues) {
return manager.createEntity('ServiceMetadata', initialValues);
}
And the whole thing looks like:
serviceMetadatas.createServiceMetadata({
ServiceName: $scope.newServiceName,
Description: $scope.newServiceDescription
});
serviceMetadatas.saveChanges();
However, the request is not being transferred to the correct controller (ServiceMetadatasController which inherits from EntitySetController), or any other controller for that matter.
The HTTP request looks like this:
POST http://localhost:8081/odata/$batch HTTP/1.1
Host: localhost:8081
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.2; WOW64; rv:23.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/23.0
Accept: multipart/mixed
Accept-Language: he-IL,he;q=0.8,en-US;q=0.5,en;q=0.3
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate
DataServiceVersion: 2.0
Content-Type: multipart/mixed; charset=UTF-8;boundary=batch_4f09-d7cf-dd99
MaxDataServiceVersion: 2.0
Referer: http://localhost:9000/
Content-Length: 580
Origin: http://localhost:9000
Connection: keep-alive
Pragma: no-cache
Cache-Control: no-cache
--batch_4f09-d7cf-dd99
Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=changeset_ca0c-06b7-ddbe
--changeset_ca0c-06b7-ddbe
Content-Type: application/http
Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary
POST ServiceMetadatas HTTP/1.1
Content-ID: 1
DataServiceVersion: 2.0
Accept: application/atomsvc+xml;q=0.8, application/json;odata=verbose;q=0.5, */*;q=0.1
Content-Type: application/json;odata=verbose
MaxDataServiceVersion: 2.0
{"ServiceMetadataId":-1,"ServiceName":"sdf sdf","Description":"sd fgs df","LastUpdated":null}
--changeset_ca0c-06b7-ddbe--
--batch_4f09-d7cf-dd99--
And the response:
HTTP/1.1 202 Accepted
Cache-Control: no-cache
Pragma: no-cache
Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=batchresponse_966d4460-e00e-4900-b1c9-85b17081cfac
Expires: -1
Server: Microsoft-IIS/8.0
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://localhost:9000
Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true
DataServiceVersion: 2.0
X-AspNet-Version: 4.0.30319
X-SourceFiles: =?UTF-8?B?QzpcVXNlcnNcVG9tZXJcRG9jdW1lbnRzXFZpc3VhbCBTdHVkaW8gMjAxMlxQcm9qZWN0c1xFYXN5Qml6eVxFYXN5Qml6eS5XZWJBUElcb2RhdGFcJGJhdGNo?=
X-Powered-By: ASP.NET
Date: Sun, 15 Sep 2013 14:32:39 GMT
Content-Length: 443
--batchresponse_966d4460-e00e-4900-b1c9-85b17081cfac
Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=changesetresponse_44da5dcf-877d-4041-a82b-c51d06a4e9a4
--changesetresponse_44da5dcf-877d-4041-a82b-c51d06a4e9a4
Content-Type: application/http
Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary
HTTP/1.1 406 Not Acceptable
Content-ID: 1
--changesetresponse_44da5dcf-877d-4041-a82b-c51d06a4e9a4--
--batchresponse_966d4460-e00e-4900-b1c9-85b17081cfac--
Any idea what the hack is going on? B.T.W GET requests works great.
P.S.
After looking at couple of demos, I though the using BreezeJS will be straight forward considering WebApi and OData.
I must say it is Far from being easy to configure this JS library. I hope it will turn out to be hard-to-setup but easy-to-use.
Thanks.
@UPDATE See Javier's great answer!!
In after digging allllot on the breeze code, I came to realize that the problem is laying deep in the createChangeRequests() of breezejs, right here:
request.requestUri = entity.entityType.defaultResourceName;
Where for some reason the defaultResouceName, completely ignores the path to this entity. Long story short, the following is a hack to resolve:
manager.metadataStore.getEntityType(ENTITY_TYPE).setProperties({defaultResourceName: THE_MISSING_PART_FROM_THE_URL + ENTITY_TYPE});
manager.createEntity(ENTITY_TYPE, values);
Not very nice, but still works!