Basically, I insert 35000 objects within one transaction:

using(var uow = new MyContext()){
  for(int i = 1; i < 35000; i++) {
     var o = new MyObject()...;
     uow.MySet.Add(o);
  }
  uow.SaveChanges();
}

This takes forever! If I use the underlying ObjectContext (by using IObjectAdapter), it's still slow but takes around 20s. It looks like DbSet<> is doing some linear searches, which takes square amount of time...

Anyone else seeing this problem?

link|improve this question
1  
I somehow believe that the answer will be similar to this: stackoverflow.com/questions/5917478/… – Ladislav Mrnka May 9 '11 at 22:55
feedback

2 Answers

up vote 20 down vote accepted

As already indicated by Ladislav in the comment, you need to disable automatic change detection to improve performance:

context.Configuration.AutoDetectChangesEnabled = false;

This change detection is enabled by default in the DbContext API.

The reason why DbContext behaves so different to the ObjectContext API is that many more functions of the DbContext API will call DetectChanges internally than functions of the ObjectContext API when automatic change detection is enabled.

Here you can find a list of those functions which call DetectChanges by default:

  • The Add, Attach, Find, Local, or Remove members on DbSet
  • The GetValidationErrors, Entry, or SaveChanges members on DbContext
  • The Entries method on DbChangeTracker

Especially Add calls DetectChanges which is responsible for the poor performance you experienced.

I contrast to this the ObjectContext API calls DetectChanges only automatically in SaveChanges but not in AddObject and the other corresponding methods mentioned above. That's the reason why the default performance of ObjectContext is faster.

Why did they introduce this default automatic change detection in DbContext in so many functions? I am not sure, but is seems that disabling it and calling DetectChanges manually at the proper points is considered as advanced and can potentially introduce subtle bugs into your application if not used correctly. (Quote from bottom of the page)

link|improve this answer
@Ladislav: Your're right I didn't find this as I was only searching for insert problems :-( – Hartmut May 10 '11 at 7:26
Thanks for the explanation. I was actually calling context.Configuration.AutoDetectChangesEnabled = false but I did it during database construction in the Seed() method. I thought this would set the default. I wasn't aware that I have to call it for each instance. Thanks! – Hartmut May 10 '11 at 7:29
@Hartmut: You could disable the change detection inside of the constructor of your derived DbContext, then you have it always disabled. But personally somehow this remark about "potentially introducing subtle bugs" when it is disabled makes me nervous. I have change detection on by default and disable it only in code blocks like yours where the performance boost is obvious and where I feel safe that it doesn't cause problems. – Slauma May 10 '11 at 9:16
I agree, I was only testing some performance critical part of my application. In production code it's best to limit it to cases like bulk inserts etc. – Hartmut May 12 '11 at 5:51
Thank you for this answer. Lots of information out there, but this cuts to the chase! – Fred Wilson Dec 16 '11 at 18:11
feedback

Little empiric test with EF 4.3 CodeFirst:

Removed 1000 objects with AutoDetectChanges = true : 23 sec

Removed 1000 objects with AutoDetectChanges = false: 11 sec

Inserted 1000 objects with AutoDetectChanges = true : 21 sec

Inserted 1000 objects with AutoDetectChanges = false : 13 sec

link|improve this answer
Thanks Zax. What are your results with 35,000 as per the question? You'll see that in the original question it tsates that the performance drops quadratically – Daniel Dyson Mar 19 at 9:45
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.