I have writing an ASP.NET Core web application that needs all the data from some tables of my database to later organize it into readable format for some analysis.
My problem is that this data is potentially massive, and so in order to increase performance i decided to get this data in parallel and not one table at a time.
My issue is that i dont quite understand how to achieve this with the inherit dependency injection as in order to be able to do parallel work, i need to instantiate the DbContext
for each of these parallel work.
The below code produces this exception:
---> (Inner Exception #6) System.ObjectDisposedException: Cannot access a disposed object. A common cause of this error is disposing a context that was resolved from dependency injection and then later trying to use the same context instance elsewhere in your application. This may occur if you are calling Dispose() on the context, or wrapping the context in a using statement. If you are using dependency injection, you should let the dependency injection container take care of disposing context instances.
Object name: 'MyDbContext'.
at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.DbContext.CheckDisposed()
at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.DbContext.get_InternalServiceProvider()
at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.DbContext.get_ChangeTracker()
ASP.NET Core project:
Startup.cs:
public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
services.AddMvc().SetCompatibilityVersion(CompatibilityVersion.Version_2_1);
services.AddDistributedMemoryCache();
services.AddDbContext<AmsdbaContext>(options =>
options.UseSqlServer(Configuration.GetConnectionString("ConnectionString"))
.UseQueryTrackingBehavior(QueryTrackingBehavior.NoTracking));
services.AddSession(options =>
{
options.Cookie.HttpOnly = true;
});
}
public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, ILoggerFactory loggerFactory)
{
if (HostingEnvironment.IsDevelopment())
{
app.UseDeveloperExceptionPage();
}
else
{
app.UseExceptionHandler("/Error");
app.UseHsts();
}
loggerFactory.AddLog4Net();
app.UseStaticFiles();
app.UseCookiePolicy();
app.UseSession();
app.UseMvc();
}
Controller's action method:
[HttpPost("[controller]/[action]")]
public ActionResult GenerateAllData()
{
List<CardData> cardsData;
using (var scope = _serviceScopeFactory.CreateScope())
using (var dataFetcher = new DataFetcher(scope))
{
cardsData = dataFetcher.GetAllData(); // Calling the method that invokes the method 'InitializeData' from below code
}
return something...;
}
.NET Core Library project:
DataFetcher's InitializeData - to get all table records according to some irrelevant parameters:
private void InitializeData()
{
var tbl1task = GetTbl1FromDatabaseTask();
var tbl2task = GetTbl2FromDatabaseTask();
var tbl3task = GetTbl3FromDatabaseTask();
var tasks = new List<Task>
{
tbl1task,
tbl2task,
tbl3task,
};
Task.WaitAll(tasks.ToArray());
Tbl1 = tbl1task.Result;
Tbl2 = tbl2task.Result;
Tbl3 = tbl3task.Result;
}
DataFetcher's sample task:
private async Task<List<SomeData>> GetTbl1FromDatabaseTask()
{
using (var amsdbaContext = _serviceScope.ServiceProvider.GetRequiredService<AmsdbaContext>())
{
amsdbaContext.ChangeTracker.QueryTrackingBehavior = QueryTrackingBehavior.NoTracking;
return await amsdbaContext.StagingRule.Where(x => x.SectionId == _sectionId).ToListAsync();
}
}