Looking at my Elmah error logs, I am seeing a few InvalidOperationExceptions from Entity Framework that deal with:

The context cannot be used while the model is being created.

This is with the latest EF CodeFirst library from Nuget. The only information I have been able to find on the net is that it is being caused by having data contexts as singletons, which is most certainly not my case. In my Windsor installer, my EF unit of work structure is being registered with:

container.Register(Component.For<IUnitOfWork>()
                            .ImplementedBy<EFUnitOfWork>()
                            .LifeStyle
                            .PerWebRequest);

I am able to recreate the error by hitting F5 in VS to start a debugging sessions, and while IIS is spinning up load up a second webpage to the debug session.

I suspect it is because the user is trying to access the system while Asp.net has unloaded due to the lack of activity, which makes sense as my product is currently in a very very small beta test. However, since real people are using the website with live data, I need as little errors occurring as possible.

Does anyone have any idea how to prevent this from occurring?


Edit: I updated my windsor controller to now contain the following code:

        container.Register(Component.For<IUnitOfWork>().ImplementedBy<EFUnitOfWork>().LifeStyle.PerWebRequest);
        using (var context = new MyJobLeadsDbContext())
        {
            context.Set<UnitTestEntity>().Any();
        }

However, when I attempt to perform a 2nd web request while IIS is loading the application, the previous error still occurs


Edit 2: As requested, here is the stack

   at System.Data.Entity.Internal.LazyInternalContext.InitializeContext()
   at System.Data.Entity.Internal.InternalContext.Initialize()
   at System.Data.Entity.Internal.InternalContext.GetEntitySetAndBaseTypeForType(Type entityType)
   at System.Data.Entity.Internal.Linq.InternalSet`1.Initialize()
   at System.Data.Entity.Internal.Linq.InternalSet`1.get_InternalContext()
   at System.Data.Entity.Infrastructure.DbQuery`1.System.Linq.IQueryable.get_Provider()
   at System.Linq.Queryable.Where[TSource](IQueryable`1 source, Expression`1 predicate)
   at MyApp.DomainModel.Queries.Users.UserByEmailQuery.Execute() in C:\Users\KallDrexx\Documents\Projects\MyApp\MyApp.DomainModel\Queries\Users\UserByEmailQuery.cs:line 44
   at MyApp.Infrastructure.MyAppMembershipProvider.GetUser(String email, Boolean userIsOnline) in C:\Users\KallDrexx\Documents\Projects\MyApp\MyApp\Infrastructure\MyAppMembershipProvider.cs:line 102
   at System.Web.Security.Membership.GetUser(String username, Boolean userIsOnline)
   at System.Web.Security.Membership.GetUser()
   at MyApp.MyAppBaseController.Initialize(RequestContext requestContext) in C:\Users\KallDrexx\Documents\Projects\MyApp\MyApp\MyAppBaseController.cs:line 23
   at System.Web.Mvc.ControllerBase.Execute(RequestContext requestContext)
   at System.Web.Mvc.ControllerBase.System.Web.Mvc.IController.Execute(RequestContext requestContext)
   at System.Web.Mvc.MvcHandler.<>c__DisplayClass6.<>c__DisplayClassb.<BeginProcessRequest>b__5()
   at System.Web.Mvc.Async.AsyncResultWrapper.<>c__DisplayClass1.<MakeVoidDelegate>b__0()
   at System.Web.Mvc.Async.AsyncResultWrapper.<>c__DisplayClass8`1.<BeginSynchronous>b__7(IAsyncResult _)
   at System.Web.Mvc.Async.AsyncResultWrapper.WrappedAsyncResult`1.End()
   at System.Web.Mvc.MvcHandler.<>c__DisplayClasse.<EndProcessRequest>b__d()
   at System.Web.Mvc.SecurityUtil.<GetCallInAppTrustThunk>b__0(Action f)
   at System.Web.Mvc.SecurityUtil.ProcessInApplicationTrust(Action action)
   at System.Web.Mvc.MvcHandler.EndProcessRequest(IAsyncResult asyncResult)
   at System.Web.Mvc.MvcHandler.System.Web.IHttpAsyncHandler.EndProcessRequest(IAsyncResult result)
   at System.Web.HttpApplication.CallHandlerExecutionStep.System.Web.HttpApplication.IExecutionStep.Execute()
   at System.Web.HttpApplication.ExecuteStep(IExecutionStep step, Boolean& completedSynchronously)
link|improve this question

This is interesting. Can find more details about the problem? Once the model is created your thread processing the request should be blocked so the context should not be in use. – Ladislav Mrnka May 23 '11 at 16:09
I don't know how to find more details about this. After visual studio's debugging thread finishes loading, I no longer see this error. It only seems to occur at the very first load of the webpage if two simultaneous calls occur at the same time. – KallDrexx May 23 '11 at 16:23
Two simultaneous calls? Can you validate that you have new instance of the context for each request? – Ladislav Mrnka May 23 '11 at 16:46
feedback

2 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

I finally figured out the true cause of this, at least for me.

The issue was that I was retrieving a DbContext from Windsor in my custom Asp.Net Membership provider. This caused an issue because the membership provider has a lifespan of the whole application, while all other retrieval calls for the db context were new db contexts for the specific web requests. This meant that two database contexts were "spinning up" at the same time and thus this error was thrown.

This also caused a lot of hard to debug entity caching issues as well, so anyone who uses EF in their membership provider needs to be real careful about their context lifetime.

link|improve this answer
Thank you, I was getting this error and I think it was because I had a global DataContext variable in my custom Role and Membership provider classes. – Austin Nov 21 '11 at 20:41
What was the solution to the problem that you identified? Ditch the use of Windsor to resolve DbContext? – David Keaveny May 23 at 1:06
Sorry I should have included that. I solved it by making EVERY one of my membership provider methods make a new request to Windsor for my DbContext, and never used the same DBContext outside that method. Prior to that I was requesting the DbContext via my membership provider's constructor and was storing it for later keeping, which caused the issue. – KallDrexx May 23 at 11:34
feedback

I ran into the same issue in a multithreaded WPF app.

My workaround was to force DbContext initialization from the Windsor installer:

container.Register(Component.For(TheDbContext.Blah.Blah));
using (var context = new TheDbContext())
      context.Set<SomeRandomEntity>().Any();

I might add in my opinion this qualifies as a bug in EF: they should have used thread-safe (with locks, or whatever) code for DbContext initialization.

Of course, a better solution is what NHibernate does: the SessionFactory is an explicitly created, separate object from the Session.

link|improve this answer
Calling container.Resolve<IUnitOfWork>() and making a DB call does not stop this issue from happening unfortunately. I agree with you that EF should be thread-safe for initialization, and it's really annoying that it's not. – KallDrexx May 23 '11 at 23:45
@KallDrexx: it does if the container initialization itself is done in a thread-safe way. I'm not even using resolve; that code is part of my DbInstaller (a class implementing IWindsorInstaller) – Diego Mijelshon May 24 '11 at 0:35
Ok I tried not using my unit of work and interacting with the DbContext itself. Now my 2nd request dies with The underlying provider failed on Open. on the same line of code, so this still doesn't seem to work for me :( – KallDrexx May 24 '11 at 1:26
@KallDrexx: post the full exception with stack trace. – Diego Mijelshon May 24 '11 at 1:59
Well I can't get that error to happen again, but the original error now occurs each time. I posted my new windsor installer code in the main question – KallDrexx May 24 '11 at 2:25
show 8 more comments
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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