I just started to play with the entity framework, so I decided to connect it to my existing SQL Server CE database. I have a table with an IDENTITY(1, 1) primary key but when I tried to add an entity, I've got the above-mentioned error.

From MS Technet artice I learned that

SQL Server Compact does not support entities with server-generated keys or values when it is used with the Entity Framework. When using the Entity Framework, an entity’s keys may be marked as server generated. This enables the database to generate a value for the key on insertion or entity creation. Additionally, zero or more properties of an entity may be marked as server-generated values. For more information, see the Store Generated Pattern topic in the Entity Framework documentation. SQL Server Compact does not support entities with server-generated keys or values when it is used with the Entity Framework, although the Entity Framework allows you to define entity types with server-generated keys or values. Data manipulation operation on an entity that has server-generated values throws a "Not supported" exception.

So now I have a few questions:

  • Why would you mark key as server-generated if it is not supported and will throw an exception? It's hard to make sence from the quoted paragraph.
  • When I've tried to add StoreGeneratedPattern="Identity" to my entity's property, Studio complained that it is not allowed. What I'm doing wrong?
  • What is the best workaround for this limitation (including switching to another DB)? My limitations are zero-installation and using entity framework.
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2  
NHibernate works fine in the same situation, btw. – Sergey Aldoukhov Mar 16 '09 at 4:42
It should be StoreGeneratedPattern="None" – Mikhail Dec 30 '10 at 12:43
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6 Answers

up vote 21 down vote accepted

When I hit this limitation, I changed the type to uniqueidentifier

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Use uniqueidentifier or generate a bigint/int key value manually is your best option.

Something like this perhaps ...

    private static object lockObject = new object();

    private static long nextID = -1;

    public static long GetNextID()
    {
        lock (lockObject)
        {
            if (nextID == -1) nextID = DateTime.UtcNow.Ticks; else nextID++;
            return nextID;
        }
    }

This assumes that you don't generate more than one record per tick during an application run (plus the time to stop and restart). This is a reasonable assumption I believe, but if you want a totally bullet proof (but more complex) solution, go read the highest ID from the database and increment from that.

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I'd go with reading the max id + 1 solution, avoiding difficult contructs or GUIDs – Jeroen Feb 12 '11 at 22:59
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SQL CE version 4.0 fixed this problem with its Entity Framework provider.

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1  
Where is this and how do you install it? I cannot find anything by googling this. – Tyrsius May 7 at 1:18
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I just hit this issue too... mostlytech's answer is probably the best option, GUIDs are very easy to use and the risk of key collision is very low (although not inexistant).

  • Why would you mark key as server-generated if it is not supported and will throw an exception? It's hard to make sence from the quoted paragraph.

Because SQL Server (not Compact) supports it, and other third parties may support it too... Entity Framework is not only for SQL Server Compact ;)

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2  
GUIDs, however, make terrible primary keys and indexes because they are not sequential. Better to use bigint/long and use a time-based value (similar to hightechrider's approach). – mcl Aug 18 '10 at 21:13
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In my case, all of my classes have the primary key named "ID"

I created an interface

public class IID
{
    public Int32 ID { get; set; }
}

Then I create an extension method

public static Int32 GetNextID<T>(this ObjectSet<T> objects)
    where T : class, IID
    {
        T entry = objects.OrderByDescending(u => u.ID).FirstOrDefault();
        if (entry == default(T))
            return 1;
        return entry.ID + 1;
    }

Then when I need a new ID, I just do this:

MyObject myobj = new MyObject();
myobj.ID = entities.MyTable.GetNextID();
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That will not work in case of multiple concurrent operation. If two operations call GetNextID before they save the record they will both have the same Id. – Ladislav Mrnka May 12 '11 at 8:51
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the other option is to use SqlCeResultSet on the tables that have the identity column.

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