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Here's the issue: My database administrator wants to be able to add/remove database objects without requiring a reinstallation of the application, but I want to be able to use the rich data that entity framework provides on the data types returned from stored procedures.

Is there any possible way to rebuild, add, or remove entities from Entity Framework at runtime? For example, if the dbcontext is contained within an isolated AppDomain, is it possible to reload the AppDomain (e.g. after running EdmGen.exe at runtime) to add new entity types? If not, is there any way that I can swap out the datacontext with another one at runtime?

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    Why is this different from adding new types at runtime without EF?
    – soandos
    May 20, 2014 at 20:24
  • @soandos, do you have a better idea for how I might be able to autogenerate types from database objects in a way that allows me to see the type signatures of input parameters and result sets from SQL Server stored procedures (at runtime)?
    – devinbost
    May 20, 2014 at 20:30
  • Perhaps I'm missing something. Are you looking for a way to store the type signatures of SQL stored procedures somewhere in your application without recompiling? Or are you trying to create a new type for the stored proc?
    – soandos
    May 20, 2014 at 20:32
  • Both. I need to be able to reflect (e.g. via IL) on the stored procedure to determine the types returned as a consequence of its invocation. (Entity Framework generates a result type to represent the result set as a Complex Type.) I also need to be able to detect the stored procedure's input parameter names and types when given only the stored procedures's name. Perhaps I can solve the problem if I can do this via ILGenerator or expression trees without EF at all.
    – devinbost
    May 20, 2014 at 20:41
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    But what about the rest of the application? If the class model changes all the time, how can you build an application on top of it? Anyway, I don't think EF is your best choice here. It's really not suited to dynamic data models. Even the old datasets or ADO.Net do better jobs here. May 20, 2014 at 20:53

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