I think I'm missing something conceptually regarding NHibernate. I have an Instrument
object which maps to an instruments
table in my database. I also have a BrokerInstrument
object which maps to my brokerInstruments
table in my database. brokerInstrumnets
is a child table of instruments
. My classes look like:
public class Instrument : Entity
{
public virtual string Name { get; set; }
public virtual string Symbol {get; set;}
public virtual ISet<BrokerInstrument> BrokerInstruments { get; set; }
public virtual bool IsActive { get; set; }
}
public class BrokerInstrument : Entity
{
public virtual Broker Broker { get; set; }
public virtual Instrument Instrument { get; set; }
public virtual decimal MinIncrement { get; set; }
}
In my unit test, if I retrieve an Instrument
from the database and then delete it with ISession.Delete
, it is removed from the database along with the children (I have cascade-all switched on in my mapping file). The Instrument
however still exists in memory. For example:
[Test]
public void CascadeTest()
{
int instrumentId = 1;
IInstrumentRepo instruments = DAL.RepoFactory.CreateInstrumentRepo(_session);
Instrument i = instruments.GetById<Instrument>(instrumentId); // retrieve an instrument from the db
foreach (BrokerInstrument bi in i.BrokerInstruments)
{
Debug.Print(bi.MinIncrement.ToString()); // make sure we can see the children
}
instruments.Delete<Instrument>(i); // physically delete the instrument row, and children from the db
IBrokerInstrumentRepo brokerInstruments = DAL.RepoFactory.CreateBrokerInstrumentRepo(_session);
BrokerInstrument deletedBrokerInstrument = brokerInstruments.GetById<BrokerInstrument>(1); // try and retrieve a deleted child
Assert.That(instruments.Count<Instrument>(), Is.EqualTo(0)); // pass (a count in the db = 0)
Assert.That(brokerInstruments.Count<BrokerInstrument>(), Is.EqualTo(0)); // pass (a count of children in the db = 0)
Assert.That(i.BrokerInstruments.Count, Is.EqualTo(0)); // fail because we still have the i object in memory, although it is gone from the db
}
What is best practise regarding the object in memory? I am now in an inconsistent state because I have an Instrument
object in memory which does not exist in the database. I'm a novice programmer so verbose answers with links are much appreciated.