This code was generated for me after added entity framework code-first for SQLCE using NuGet. They did no changes to any other file. The file (SQLCEEntityFramework.cs was created and placed in App_Start folder.

Does this mean it automatically gets executed or something? The same thing happened when I added Ninject for MVC 3. No code was added to the global.ascx file so I have no idea if its plug and play or I have to configure something.

[assembly: WebActivator.PreApplicationStartMethod(typeof(StackTorrents.WebUI.App_Start.SQLCEEntityFramework), "Start")]
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According to:

http://haacked.com/archive/2010/05/16/three-hidden-extensibility-gems-in-asp-net-4.aspx

This new attribute allows you to have code run way early in the ASP.NET pipeline as an application starts up. I mean way early, even before Application_Start. This happens to also be before code in your App_code folder (assuming you have any code in there) has been compiled. To use this attribute, create a class library and add this attribute as an assembly level attribute. A common place to add this would be in the AssemblyInfo.cs class within the Properties folder.

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The PreApplicationStartMethodAttribute from the .NET framework allows only one per assembly. Most importantly, WebActivator provides it's own implementation of the attribute that permits multiple instances of per assembly. – Ed Chapel Apr 28 '11 at 4:39
@Ed Chapel - does this mean that when I imported SQLCE4 from nuget and also ninject, both has a PreApplicationStartMethod. Only a random one will be executed? – Lol coder May 3 '11 at 15:10
I don't know about SQLCE4, but ninject uses WebActivator. I am certain that if you stick to the WebActivator attribute that all of the PreApplicationStartMethod attributes will run. – Ed Chapel May 3 '11 at 15:14
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