3

Asp.net identity creates the primary key as nvarchar(128) with a clustered index. Based on http://www.sqlskills.com/blogs/kimberly/guids-as-primary-keys-andor-the-clustering-key/ I want to either

  1. Update my application to have a column with clustered index being on an int
  2. Change from guid to int for primary key storage.

What would you suggest? If the first solution is the way to go, does entity framework provide a way to implement this?
Is ASP.NET Identity - How to change the dbo.AspNetUsers.Id into a nonclustered index? the only way

7
  • 2
  • You could use the approach that i've posted here: stackoverflow.com/questions/6532418/… So a new table(aspnet_UserID) which maps the guids and the ints. Then you don't need to change the membership-provider and everything still works but you can link all your tables with the int instead of the guid. Jan 14, 2015 at 12:30
  • 1
    if you are not going to have x thousands of users, I would not sweat on it. Jan 14, 2015 at 12:55
  • @TimSchmelter the question is about Asp.Net Identity, not Membership Provider and these are very different.
    – trailmax
    Jan 14, 2015 at 13:59
  • 1
    @trailmax: you're right, i'm not familiar with Asp.Net Identity so i've lumped both together. Jan 14, 2015 at 14:10

1 Answer 1

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For #2, If you don't need (or want) to use GUIDs as the primary key you can change them to ints like so:

public class ApplicationUser : IdentityUser<int, ApplicationUserLogin, 
    ApplicationUserRole, ApplicationUserClaim>
{
}

public class ApplicationUserLogin : IdentityUserLogin<int>
{
}

public class ApplicationUserClaim : IdentityUserClaim<int>
{
}

public class ApplicationRole : IdentityRole<int, ApplicationUserRole>
{
}

public class ApplicationUserRole : IdentityUserRole<int>
{
}

Then declare your DbContext like so:

public class MyContext: IdentityDbContext<ApplicationUser, ApplicationRole, int,
  ApplicationUserLogin, ApplicationUserRole, ApplicationUserClaim> 
{
}
3
  • Is there any benefits by using int instead of string? (and vice versa - string instead of int)?
    – Sam
    Jan 27, 2019 at 1:00
  • nvarchar(128) will support more users than an int will. NewID() in SQL, GetNewID() & NewGuid() in C# can generate unique IDs. Int sync may be quicker on smaller tables. but can't be used for merge replication sync.
    – MERLIN
    Apr 3, 2019 at 4:01
  • Also, users won't feel that gnawing OCD urge to keep tables ordered by the ID fields, & will more likely maintain tables sorted by name or some other more relevant field to the data the table holds.
    – MERLIN
    Apr 3, 2019 at 4:06

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