54

I have my core project in C#.

I work on a database, where some tables have the columns "user_mod" and "date_mod" for sign who and when made some mods and the same with "data_new" and "user_new".

My question: is there a way to centralize this and make this data inserted automatically, where I create the instance of dbContext?

If not, I will use an audit trail tool. I have seen some of these, but there is a problem: all of these, require some code in my model. But I don't want to write in my model, because if I have to change it, I will lost the mods. Is it possible use an audit trail for EF6 without writing in the model file(s)? How?

EDIT:

My attempt to override the saveChanges.

public partial class PieEntities : DbContext
{
    public override int SaveChanges(System.Data.Objects.SaveOptions options)
    {
        var timestamp = DateTime.Now;

        EntityState es = EntityState.Added;
        ObjectStateManager o = new ObjectStateManager();

        foreach (ObjectStateEntry entry in o.GetObjectStateEntries(EntityState.Added ))  {
            if (entry.Entity.GetType() == typeof(TabImpianti)) {
                TabImpianti impianto = entry.Entity as TabImpianti;
                impianto.DATA_INS = timestamp;
                impianto.DATA_MOD = timestamp;
                string u = mdlImpostazioni.p.UserName;
                impianto.USER_INS = u;
                impianto.USER_MOD = u;
            }
        }
        return base.SaveChanges(options);
    }
}

UPDATE: I've summarized the solution here.

7
  • 1
    possible duplicate of Entity Framework DbContext SaveChanges() OriginalValue Incorrect. There are many more efforts in this area. Look for Entity Framework + auditing. Oct 14, 2014 at 7:59
  • 2
    @GertArnold why? I don't think so. Further, that question is about EF4, two versions older of mine. Oct 14, 2014 at 8:04
  • Well, I picked a random one from a long list of hits when I search StackOverflow on this topic. It usually amounts to overriding SaveChanges, which is the same in EF4. In EF6 you may venture something in the area of command tree interceptors, but I'm not sure where that will take you. Oct 14, 2014 at 8:15
  • @PieroAlberto your ObjectStateManager must come from the context: assign it from this (this as IObjectContextAdapter).ObjectStateManager
    – samy
    Oct 14, 2014 at 9:24
  • Regarding the base call, I don't see why it would pose a problem. I think you don't need to tell the compiler you are inheriting from a DbContext again though, remove the : DbContext
    – samy
    Oct 14, 2014 at 9:26

3 Answers 3

80

If using EF6's DbContext you can use ChangeTracker in SaveChanges override to find added/modified entities of custom type, for example IAuditedEntity.

public interface IAuditedEntity {
  string CreatedBy { get; set; }
  DateTime CreatedAt { get; set; }
  string LastModifiedBy { get; set; }
  DateTime LastModifiedAt { get; set; }
}

public override int SaveChanges() {
  var addedAuditedEntities = ChangeTracker.Entries<IAuditedEntity>()
    .Where(p => p.State == EntityState.Added)
    .Select(p => p.Entity);

  var modifiedAuditedEntities = ChangeTracker.Entries<IAuditedEntity>()
    .Where(p => p.State == EntityState.Modified)
    .Select(p => p.Entity);

  var now = DateTime.UtcNow;

  foreach (var added in addedAuditedEntities) {
    added.CreatedAt = now;
    added.LastModifiedAt = now;
  }

  foreach (var modified in modifiedAuditedEntities) {
    modified.LastModifiedAt = now;
  }

  return base.SaveChanges();
}
12
  • your code looks simply, but I have just tried it... I have inserted a new item in one of my tables and it didn't enter in the for of addedEntities.. how does it work? what can I do? Oct 14, 2014 at 9:37
  • Entities that you want to track/audit must implement IAuditedEntity Oct 14, 2014 at 9:39
  • my entities? but my entities are defined in the model... and I don't want to mod manually the auto-generated model. How can I do it? (excuse me the dum question) Oct 14, 2014 at 9:42
  • 3
    EF Database first entities are marked with the partial keyword. That makes it easy to assign attributes without interfering with generated code. Just create a new file AuditedEntries.cs containing [IAuditedEntity] public partial class TabImpianti {}
    – B2K
    Nov 16, 2015 at 20:09
  • 1
    Just to be clear, since each entity implements the IAuditedEntity interface the properties are part of the individual entities so they are saved to the same table correct?
    – 4444
    Jul 11, 2017 at 19:21
6

There is one way to do it: you can create a partial class that is the same name as your object context and implement an override of the SaveChanges method. In this override you can look at all the changes that will be pushed to the DB and process them.

You can process them any way you like, in the following example I created an interface IAutoTimestampEntity that contained a creation date and a modification date. Any object of this type would be automatically updated with the time of change.

public override int SaveChanges(System.Data.Objects.SaveOptions options)
{
    var timestamp = DateTime.Now;

    foreach (var InsertedAutoTimestampEntity in ObjectStateManager.GetObjectStateEntries(System.Data.EntityState.Added).Select(ose => ose.Entity).OfType<IAutoTimestampEntity>())
    {
        InsertedAutoTimestampEntity.CreationDate = timestamp;
        InsertedAutoTimestampEntity.ModificationDate = timestamp;
    }

    foreach (var UpdatedAutoTimestampEntity in ObjectStateManager.GetObjectStateEntries(System.Data.EntityState.Modified).Select(ose => ose.Entity).OfType<IAutoTimestampEntity>())
    {
        UpdatedAutoTimestampEntity.ModificationDate = timestamp;
    }

    return base.SaveChanges(options);
}

You can use the same principle, or you can look at the type of each changed entity in details. I like the declarative aspect of the interface though. It lets you expose one aspect of automation explicitly instead of letting it be done silently by the EF layer.

If you have a DbContext instead of an ObjectContext, cast your DbContext to IObjectContextAdapter to access the ObjectStateManager

15
  • nice!! Is it also possible to see what is a delete? what are InsertedAutoTimestampEntity and UpdatedAutoTimestampEntity? Oct 14, 2014 at 8:16
  • InsertedAutoTimeStampEntity and UpdatedAutoTimestampEntity are the names I gave the entities in the enumeration, so it is just naming.
    – samy
    Oct 14, 2014 at 8:18
  • Regarding the delete, here is the EntityState enum, you can see deleted is present as well as other states you can track: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/…
    – samy
    Oct 14, 2014 at 8:19
  • I have added the reference to System.entity. But it says that "ObjectStateManager.GetObjectStateEntries(System.Data.EntityState.Added)" it isn't a static method and I have to instance it. Whty in your code isn't in this way? Oct 14, 2014 at 8:38
  • If you are using a DbContext instead of an ObjectContext, cast your DbContext to IObjectContextAdapter to access the ObjectStateManager
    – samy
    Oct 14, 2014 at 8:48
1

Addition to the answer from @AlaaMasoud.

With CreatedDate and UpdatedDate:

interface IEntityDate
{
    DateTime CreatedDate { get; set; }

    DateTime UpdatedDate { get; set; }
}

public abstract class EntityBase<T1>: IEntityDate
{
    public T1 Id { get; set; }

    public virtual DateTime CreatedDate { get; set; }
    public virtual string CreatedBy { get; set; }
    public virtual DateTime UpdatedDate { get; set; }
    public virtual string UpdatedBy { get; set; }
}

public override int SaveChanges()
{
    var now = DateTime.Now;

    foreach (var changedEntity in ChangeTracker.Entries())
    {
        if (changedEntity.Entity is IEntityDate entity)
        {
            switch (changedEntity.State)
            {
                case EntityState.Added:
                    entity.CreatedDate = now;
                    entity.UpdatedDate = now;
                    break;

                case EntityState.Modified:
                    Entry(entity).Property(x => x.CreatedDate).IsModified = false;
                    entity.UpdatedDate = now;
                    break;
            }
        }
    }

    return base.SaveChanges();
}

To handle CreatedBy and UpdatedBy I use a wrapper for DbContext like this:

public interface IEntity
{
    DateTime CreatedDate { get; set; }

    string CreatedBy { get; set; }

    DateTime UpdatedDate { get; set; }

    string UpdatedBy { get; set; }
}

public interface ICurrentUser
{
    string GetUsername();
}

public class ApplicationDbContextUserWrapper
{
    public ApplicationDbContext Context;

    public ApplicationDbContextUserWrapper(ApplicationDbContext context, ICurrentUser currentUser)
    {
        context.CurrentUser = currentUser;
        this.Context = context;
    }
}

public class ApplicationDbContext : DbContext
{

    public ICurrentUser CurrentUser;
    
    public override int SaveChanges()
    {
        var now = DateTime.Now;

        foreach (var changedEntity in ChangeTracker.Entries())
        {
            if (changedEntity.Entity is IEntity entity)
            {
                switch (changedEntity.State)
                {
                    case EntityState.Added:
                        entity.CreatedDate = now;
                        entity.UpdatedDate = now;
                        entity.CreatedBy = CurrentUser.GetUsername();
                        entity.UpdatedBy = CurrentUser.GetUsername();
                        break;
                    case EntityState.Modified:
                        Entry(entity).Property(x => x.CreatedBy).IsModified = false;
                        Entry(entity).Property(x => x.CreatedDate).IsModified = false;
                        entity.UpdatedDate = now;
                        entity.UpdatedBy = CurrentUser.GetUsername();
                        break;
                }
            }
        }

        return base.SaveChanges();
    }
    
    ...

Source:

https://stackoverflow.com/a/53669556/3850405

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