In NHibernate, there is a where
mapping that allows you to specify a condition on a property mapping that affects how it is pulled from the database. For example, if I wanted to implement a soft delete and exclude all deleted items from a set, I could map it like so:
FluentNHibernate
// in class ParentMap : ClassMap
HasMany(x => x.Children).Where("IsDeleted = 0");
Hbm.Xml
<class name="Parent" table="[Parents]">
<bag cascade="all" lazy="true" name="Children" where="IsDeleted = 0">
<!-- rest of map here -->
</bag>
</class>
Is there anything similar in Entity Framework 6?
The closest thing I found was a library called EntityFramework.Filters, which allows you to add global filters for properties, but it doesn't seem to work when that property is a collection.
To give a better example of why a mapping like this is necessary, let's say I have a class that has a collection of objects that have a recursive child entity relationship (i.e., a collection of objects of the same type). They follow this basic structure:
public class ReportOutline
{
public long Id { get; set; }
public string Title { get; set; }
public string Author { get; set; }
public virtual ICollection<OutlineItem> OutlineItems { get; set; }
}
public class OutlineItem
{
public long Id { get; set; }
public string Name { get; set; }
public long ReportOutlineId { get; set; }
public long? ParentOutlineItemId { get; set; }
public virtual ReportOutline ReportOutline { get; set; }
public virtual OutlineItem ParentOutlineItem { get; set; }
public virtual ICollection<OutlineItem> OutlineItems { get; set; }
}
And these are mapped with the EF fluent API like this:
modelBuilder.Entity<ReportOutline>()
.HasKey(o => o.Id)
.HasMany(o => o.OutlineItems)
.WithRequired(i => i.ReportOutline)
.HasForeignKey(i => i.OutlineId);
modelBuilder.Entity<OutlineItem>()
.HasKey(p => p.Id)
.HasMany(p => p.OutlineItems)
.WithOptional(c => c.ParentOutlineItem)
.HasForeignKey(c => c.ParentOutlineItemId);
This produces the correct database structure, and my records look fine. Here's an example of what the OutlineItems
table would look like with two items on a ReportOutline
, if one had two child items (four altogether):
Id Name ReportOutlineId ParentOutlineItemId
1 Introduction 1 NULL
2 Pets 1 NULL
3 Cats 1 2
4 Dogs 1 2
When the ReportOutline
gets loaded through the DbContext
, however, since ReportOutlineId
matched the outline's Id
, the ReportOutline.OutlineItems
is getting populated with all four items. This results in the sub-items appearing both under the parent items and the main outline itself:
Title: My Report
Author: valverij
I. Introduction (Id: 1)
II. Pets (Id: 2)
A. Cats (Id: 3)
B. Dogs (Id: 4)
III. Cats (Id: 3) <--- Duplicated
IV. Dogs (Id: 4) <--- Duplicated
Now, if I were using NHibernate with FluentNhibernate, I could specify a where
condition on the entity mapping, so that ReportOutline.OutlineItems
only pulls parent items:
// in ReportOutlineMap
HasMany(x => x.OutlineItems).Where("ParentOutlineItemId IS NULL");
Without that, I would have to remember to only access ReportOutline
objects through a pre-written query that explicitly deals with the OutlineItem
collection.
ReportOutline
can have multipleOutlineItems
. Each one has information about itself. Each of thoseOutlineItems
can also have one or moreOutlineItems
that falls under it (see the example output). – valverij Dec 5 '14 at 22:58