9

In a unidirectional many-to-many relationship between Registration and Item, where a Registration has an ISet<Item> ItemsPurchased and Item has no reference back to registrations (it's not a useful way to explore the object graph), when I look at the SQL being generated, I see

INSERT INTO Registrations_Items (RegistrationId, ItemId) VALUES (@p0, @p1);@p0 = 1 [Type: Int32 (0)], @p1 = 1 [Type: Int32 (0)]
UPDATE Items SET Price = @p0, Name = @p1, [...], ListIndex = @p5, EventId = @p6 WHERE ItemId = @p7

The parameters passed to the update are correct, but nothing about the Item has changed, so the update is not needed.

Mapping is by automapping with this override in place for Registration and no overrides for Item. DB Schema looks completely correct. I removed all conventions and tested again and the behavior persisted, so it's not any of my mapping conventions that are doing this.

mapping.HasManyToMany(e => e.ItemsPurchased).AsSet().Cascade.All().Not.Inverse();

Why is NHibernate making this UPDATE call and what can I do to stop it? It's not really hurting anything but it suggests that I did something wrong, so I'd like to figure out what.

Edit: Per comment below, I created a unit test which creates an Event (Item must belong to an Event), adds two Items to it, evicts the first from session and flushes session, then Gets the first back by its ID.

I notice something odd in the SELECT items line below (2nd from bottom)

INSERT INTO Events (blah blah blah...)
select @@IDENTITY
INSERT INTO Items (Price, Name, StartDate, EndDate, ExternalID, ListIndex, EventId) VALUES (@p0, @p1, @p2, @p3, @p4, @p5, @p6);@p0 = 100.42 [Type: Decimal (0)], @p1 = 'Item 1' [Type: String (0)], @p2 = NULL [Type: DateTime (0)], @p3 = NULL [Type: DateTime (0)], @p4 = '123' [Type: String (0)], @p5 = 0 [Type: Int32 (0)], @p6 = 1 [Type: Int32 (0)]
select @@IDENTITY
SELECT blah blah blah FROM Events event0_ WHERE event0_.EventId=@p0;@p0 = 1 [Type: Int32 (0)]
SELECT itemsforsa0_.EventId as EventId1_, itemsforsa0_.ItemId as ItemId1_, itemsforsa0_.ListIndex as ListIndex1_, itemsforsa0_.ItemId as ItemId3_0_, itemsforsa0_.Price as Price3_0_, itemsforsa0_.Name as Name3_0_, itemsforsa0_.StartDate as StartDate3_0_, itemsforsa0_.EndDate as EndDate3_0_, itemsforsa0_.ExternalID as ExternalID3_0_, itemsforsa0_.ListIndex as ListIndex3_0_, itemsforsa0_.EventId as EventId3_0_ FROM Items itemsforsa0_ WHERE itemsforsa0_.EventId=@p0;@p0 = 1 [Type: Int32 (0)]
UPDATE Items SET Price = @p0, Name = @p1, StartDate = @p2, EndDate = @p3, ExternalID = @p4, ListIndex = @p5, EventId = @p6 WHERE ItemId = @p7;@p0 = 100.42000 [Type: Decimal (0)], @p1 = 'Item 1' [Type: String (0)], @p2 = NULL [Type: DateTime (0)], @p3 = NULL [Type: DateTime (0)], @p4 = '123' [Type: String (0)], @p5 = 0 [Type: Int32 (0)], @p6 = 1 [Type: Int32 (0)], @p7 = 1 [Type: Int32 (0)]

The table is created correctly:

create table Items (
    ItemId INT IDENTITY NOT NULL,
   Price NUMERIC(19,5) not null,
   Name NVARCHAR(255) not null,
   StartDate DATETIME null,
   EndDate DATETIME null,
   ExternalID NVARCHAR(255) not null,
   ListIndex INT not null,
   EventId INT not null,
   primary key (ItemId)
)

The DateTimes are deliberately nullable because an item might not need to be date-specific (an example of something that is would be "early-bird registration").

2
  • To confirm a phantom update issue, Get that same item and check if an update is issued on flush/commit. Then you can rule out any many-to-many cascading issue.
    – dotjoe
    May 30, 2012 at 20:51
  • Could this be related to having a decimal field? Google turns up some results for Phantom Updates and decimal, but I haven't gotten to the bottom of what they all say yet. May 31, 2012 at 13:13

2 Answers 2

10

This is called: Phantom Updates, it is usually related with the mapping of your objects

This is the primary cause:

Imagine we have an object like this

public class Product
{
   public Guid Id { get; set; }
   public int ReorderLevel { get; set; }
   public decimal UnitPrice { get; set; }
}

and a map:

public class ProductMap : ClassMap<Product>
{
   public ProductMap()
   {
      Not.LazyLoad();
      Id(x => x.Id).GeneratedBy.GuidComb();
      Map(x => x.ReorderLevel);
      Map(x => x.UnitPrice).Not.Nullable();
   }
}

Note that the ReorderLevel will accept nulls

If you save this entity without specifying a ReorderLevel it will be saved with a null value, but then when you load it back from the database, since the ReorderLevel type is int, a 0 will be added which will cause the entity to be marked as dirty and therefore it will cause an update

These kind of errors are difficult to detect and track, I recommend you to use Nullable<> types when you really want a null in the database

The way I usually accomplish this is to create a convention that will automatically set my Value Types to null if they are declared with Nullable<>, otherwise the field will be marked as NotNullable

Just to complement, this is how my convention looks like:

    mapper.BeforeMapProperty += (ins, memb, cust) =>
    {
        var type = memb.LocalMember.GetPropertyOrFieldType();

        if (type.IsValueType)
        {
            if (type.IsGenericType && type.GetGenericTypeDefinition() == typeof(Nullable<>))
            {
                cust.Column(x => { x.NotNullable(notnull: false); });
            }
            else
            {
                cust.Column(x => { x.NotNullable(notnull: true); });
            }
        }
    }
7
  • I already have a ColumnNullConvention' which is ensuring that any field marked with DataAnnotations.Required` is declared not null. May 31, 2012 at 12:51
  • I have edited the original question to show the SQL for a simple create-evict-flush-get cycle and included the table mapping. May 31, 2012 at 13:03
  • 1
    The problem is with the Price field, as you can see, it is inserted the value 100.42 but then it is updated with 100.42000 I think that's marking the entity as dirty. Do you have custom logic to format the Price field?, also could you update the post with the mapping of the Price field and its entity?
    – Jupaol
    May 31, 2012 at 14:15
  • The Price field is a C# decimal? with a simple get/set and no custom logic. Views are responsible for formatting it for display. Its mapping is now mapping.Map(i => i.Price).Precision(6).Scale(2); although that hasn't changed anything. May 31, 2012 at 14:29
  • Just one observation if price is decimal? why it's being marked as NotNull in the database
    – Jupaol
    May 31, 2012 at 14:34
1

As noted above (below? who knows. Look for the comment I left on the other answer), I noticed that the difference between the CanGenerateDatabaseSchema unit test and the CanGetItem unit test was that one was giving me DECIMAL (6,2) and the other was giving me DECIMAL (19,0).

I poked around more and realized that CanGenerateDatabaseSchema was using my "real" config (from the Web project) and the other test was using my "unit test" config. My unit tests were being run against Sql Server CE ... when I changed my unit tests to use the same configuration as my real database (Sql Server 2005), suddenly the phantom update went away.

So if anyone else runs into unexpected Phantom Updates with decimals... check if you're using Sql Server CE. Since the test is actually passing (the comment that says it's failing is incorrect, it's not failing, just doing extra work), I guess I'll live with it, although why Sql CE is ignoring my configuration is a good question, and a possible NH or FNH bug.

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