I have an issue with concurrency token of DateTime. Here's a simple way to reproduce the problem. Have one entity:
public class Employee
{
public int EmployeeID { get; set; }
public string Name { get; set; }
[ConcurrencyCheck]
public DateTime LastModified { get; set; }
}
A trivial DbContext:
public class MyContext : DbContext
{
public DbSet<Employee> Employees { get; set; }
}
And the following code:
Employee orig;
// Create a row (insert)
using (var context = new MyContext())
{
orig = new Employee
{
Name = "Mike",
LastModified = DateTime.Now
};
context.Employees.Add(orig);
context.SaveChanges();
}
// Update the row, passing the right concurrency token
using (var context = new MyContext())
{
var clone = new Employee
{
EmployeeID = orig.EmployeeID,
Name = "Suzanne",
// Pass the concurrency token here
LastModified = orig.LastModified
};
context.Employees.Attach(clone);
// Mark the entity as modified to force an update
context.Entry(clone).State = EntityState.Modified;
// Boom! Currency exception!
context.SaveChanges();
}
Basically, I create an employee, then update it. Bang! I look at the update statement generated on SQL (Profiling):
exec sp_executesql N'update [dbo].[Employees]
set [Name] = @0, [LastModified] = @1
where (([EmployeeID] = @2) and ([LastModified] = @3))
',N'@0 nvarchar(max) ,@1 datetime2(7),@2 int,@3 datetime2(7)',@0=N'Suzanne',@1='2012-02-21
12:06:30.0141536',@2=0,@3='2012-02-21 12:06:30.0141536'
The statement seems sound to me, but it fails, i.e. it modifies zero row as if ([LastModified] = @3) failed.
I suspect a 'precision problem', i.e. the number of digits mismatched with the one stored. Could it be a mismatch between DateTime representation in .NET and SQL?
I've tried using System.Data.SqlTypes.SqlDateTime instead of DateTime in my Poco class, hoping this would carry the right precision, but I wasn't able to map it, EF always had the property unmapped.
Solutions?
LastModifiedhas theConcurrencyCheckattribute, ifDateTimehas more precision than the SQL Server data type, it should be truncated afterSaveChanges. IfDateTimehas less precision, then the value should be stored exactly. Either way, afterSaveChanges, theLastModifiedproperty should match exactly what is stored in the database. Could you check what exactly is stored by retrieving the date without EF? – hvd Feb 21 at 18:23