4

I have a method for updating some tables. For update I need get first of TestProcess, but I don't like that. How can I update TestProcess without select(firstOrDefault) operation, used only for the update operation?

Example of method:

public void UpdateTestProcess(int id, string updateID)
{
    using (TestEntities context = new TestEntities())
                {
                    TestProcess pr = context.TestProcess.FirstOrDefault(x => x.MyID == id);
                    pr.UpdateID = updateID;             

                    context.TestProcess.Attach(pr);
                    context.ObjectStateManager.ChangeObjectState(pr, EntityState.Modified);
                    context.SaveChanges();
               }
}
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3 Answers 3

7
TestProcess pr = new TestProcess()
{
    MyID == id,
};

context.Set<TestProcess>().Attach(pr);

pr.UpdateID = updateID;

context.SaveChanges();

If you are setting the value to the default value of that type (for example, setting an int to 0) it won't be picked up as a change, and you need to manually set the state.

pr.UpdateID = updateID;
context.Entry(pr).Property(p => p.UpdateID).IsModified = true;

You can put such code away in extension methods, so you can do things like this (I'll leave the implementation as an exercise):

Foo entity = this.DbContext.GetEntityForUpdate<Foo>(
    item => item.ID, model.ID
    );

this.DbContext.UpdateProperty(entity, item => item.Name, model.Name);
5
  • How implement your example if I used ObjectContext?
    – zrabzdn
    Jul 3, 2013 at 8:28
  • Why would you use ObjectContext with EF 5 ?
    – user247702
    Jul 3, 2013 at 8:28
  • I can't help you in that case. DbContext has been recommended for a while now, if the situation allows it, you should use that instead.
    – user247702
    Jul 3, 2013 at 8:32
  • In your example MyID is a primary key. I need update not only by primary key, a need update also by foreign key. If I used you example with TestProcess pr = new TestProcess() { ForeignKey = id }; and pr.UpdateID = updateID; context.Entry(pr).Property(p => p.UpdateID).IsModified = true; after that I have error Store update, insert, or delete statement affected an unexpected number of rows (0). Entities may have been modified or deleted since entities were loaded. Refresh ObjectStateManager entrie. Whether I can update by foreign key?
    – zrabzdn
    Jul 5, 2013 at 5:55
  • I don't believe EF is capable of doing such an update without being supplied the primary key.
    – user247702
    Jul 5, 2013 at 7:53
2

You can do like that (you probably should have all the test process data):

TestProcess pr = new TestProcess();

pr.Id = id;
pr.UpdateID = updateID;

context.Attach(pr);
context.ObjectStateManager.ChangeObjectState(pr, EntityState.Modified);
context.SaveChanges();
2
  • It is not work. I have error: Argument 1: cannot convert from 'Process' to 'System.Data.Objects.DataClasses.IEntityWithKey'
    – zrabzdn
    Jul 2, 2013 at 13:47
  • I'm trying context.AttachTo("TestProcesses", pr); context.ObjectStateManager.ChangeObjectState(pr, EntityState.Modified); context.TestProcesses.MergeOption = MergeOption.OverwriteChanges; context.AcceptAllChanges(); But not save changes
    – zrabzdn
    Jul 3, 2013 at 7:38
1

The code:

TestProcess testprocess = dbcontext.TestProcesses.Attach(new TestProcess { MyID = id });
tp.UpdateID = updateID;
dbcontext.Entry<TestProcess>(testprocess).Property(tp => tp.UpdateID).IsModified = true;
dbcontext.Configuration.ValidateOnSaveEnabled = false;
dbcontext.SaveChanges();

The result TSQL:

exec sp_executesql N'UPDATE [dbo].[TestProcesses]
SET [UpdateID] = @0
WHERE ([MyID] = @1)
',N'@0 bigint,@1 bigint',@0=2,@1=1

Note:

The "IsModified = true" line, is needed because when you create the new TestProcess object (only with the MyID property populated) all the other properties has their default values (0, null, etc). If you want to update the DB with a "default value", the change will not be detected by entity framework, and then DB will not be updated.

In example:

testprocess.UpdateID = null;

will not work without the line "IsModified = true", because the property UpdateID, is already null when you created the empty TestProcess object, you needs to say to EF that this column must be updated, and this is the purpose of this line.

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