Before I kick my computer in to next week...

I've checked out every other question about this, but none of them have the solution. I've stripped this code right back, but it's still not working.

I'm getting this error when saving an object: NHibernate.AssertionFailure: null identifier

This is my mapping file:

public class OrderMap : BaseMap<Order>
{
    public SalesOrderMap()
    {
        Id(x => x.Id).Column("OrderId");
    }
}

This is the entity:

public class Order
{
    public virtual int Id { get; protected set; }
}

This is my test code:

Order order = new Order();
ISession session = SessionFactory.GetCurrentSession();
session.SaveOrUpdate(order); <----EXCEPTION ON THIS LINE
session.Flush();

And then bang...it breaks with

[AssertionFailure: null identifier]
  NHibernate.Engine.EntityKey..ctor(Object identifier, String rootEntityName, String entityName, IType identifierType, Boolean batchLoadable, ISessionFactoryImplementor factory, EntityMode entityMode) +135
   NHibernate.Engine.EntityKey..ctor(Object id, IEntityPersister persister, EntityMode entityMode) +70
   NHibernate.Event.Default.AbstractSaveEventListener.PerformSaveOrReplicate(Object entity, EntityKey key, IEntityPersister persister, Boolean useIdentityColumn, Object anything, IEventSource source, Boolean requiresImmediateIdAccess) +545
   NHibernate.Event.Default.AbstractSaveEventListener.PerformSave(Object entity, Object id, IEntityPersister persister, Boolean useIdentityColumn, Object anything, IEventSource source, Boolean requiresImmediateIdAccess) +322
   NHibernate.Event.Default.AbstractSaveEventListener.SaveWithGeneratedId(Object entity, String entityName, Object anything, IEventSource source, Boolean requiresImmediateIdAccess) +130
   NHibernate.Event.Default.DefaultSaveOrUpdateEventListener.SaveWithGeneratedOrRequestedId(SaveOrUpdateEvent event) +27
   NHibernate.Event.Default.DefaultSaveOrUpdateEventListener.EntityIsTransient(SaveOrUpdateEvent event) +63
   NHibernate.Event.Default.DefaultSaveOrUpdateEventListener.PerformSaveOrUpdate(SaveOrUpdateEvent event) +89
   NHibernate.Event.Default.DefaultSaveOrUpdateEventListener.OnSaveOrUpdate(SaveOrUpdateEvent event) +188
   NHibernate.Impl.SessionImpl.FireSaveOrUpdate(SaveOrUpdateEvent event) +259
   NHibernate.Impl.SessionImpl.SaveOrUpdate(Object obj) +256

if anyone's interested, this is how the session factory is built:

ControllerSource.SessionFactory = Fluently.Configure()
                .Database(MsSqlConfiguration.MsSql2008.ConnectionString(DataConfig.ConnectionString))
                .Mappings(x => x.FluentMappings.Add(typeof (OrderMap)))
                .ExposeConfiguration(c =>{
                                             c.SetProperty("generate_statistics", "false");
                                             c.SetProperty("current_session_context_class", contextClass);
                                             c.SetProperty("cache.use_second_level_cache", "false");
                                             c.SetProperty("cache.use_query_cache", "false");
                                             c.SetProperty("connection.release_mode", "on_close");
                })
                .BuildSessionFactory();
link|improve this question

Can you post the create script for the order table? – twaggs Nov 15 '11 at 15:12
It's currently just a table with the field in, auto increment, int, not nullable – Paul Nov 15 '11 at 15:15
(I think I've been a bit of a pillock........) – Paul Nov 15 '11 at 15:16
How about showing your SessionFactory.GetCurrentSession – twaggs Nov 15 '11 at 15:36
What does BaseMap look like? – Ian Nelson Nov 15 '11 at 15:39
show 1 more comment
feedback

2 Answers

You need to either assign your entitity an id when trying to create a new one or specify how it is generated in the mapping file. Change your mapping to:

Id(x => x.Id).Column("OrderId").GeneratedBy.Identity();
link|improve this answer
I believe "Identity" is the default for that value...unfortunately that didn't work – Paul Nov 15 '11 at 15:21
@Paul - remove 'protected' from set in orderid property – Justin Nov 15 '11 at 15:25
feedback

The default generator is Native which will in turn use Identity for SQL Server 2008. My bet is that you don't have identity specified on the column in the table definition.

link|improve this answer
Thats the correct explanation. Someone should accept this as the answer. – Tobias Dec 21 '11 at 13:31
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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