I've noticed a very strange behavior of the Entity Framework 6.1. My goal is to conditionally count some rows from a table filled with 2 millions records. Firstly, I've have used simple method to obtain the desired value:
private void SeedsQuery(object o)
{
StatProperty property = o as StatProperty;
using (SteelPoppyContext context = new SteelPoppyContext())
{
property.Value = context.QueuedGames.Count(game => game.IsSeed);
}
}
This code runs about 1 sec and provides desired result without using any memory. Now, I would like to implement more conditions to the same query using switch statement. The easiest way is to use a delegate which is provided each time the query is ran. To simplify our case, I've prepared a simple example.
private void SeedsQuery(object o)
{
StatProperty property = o as StatProperty;
Func<QueuedGame, bool> predicate = new Func<QueuedGame, bool>(game => game.IsSeed);
using (SteelPoppyContext context = new SteelPoppyContext())
{
property.Value = context.QueuedGames.Count(predicate);
}
}
This method should do exactly the same thing as the one above it. However, when I run this code, the query execution takes about 1 min, and used memory jumps to 1GB. I'm guessing that Entity Framework is fetching all the data from the database and then the condition is checked. Is there any explanation to such behavior?