I've been tasked with developing a means of auditing reads/edits/deletes of data from our databases. I did a search on how to do this with EF. I found this blog post on CodeProject, Implementing Audit Trail using Entity Framework Part-1. However, the article was written back in 2009. I'm sure it will work, but I'm wondering if using EF 6 and higher, there might be better ways of doing this? Does EF 6+ have a newer way of getting the necessary data for logging/auditing? Is there a "best practice" type of approach for auditing using EF 6+?
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2But why not just use database triggers? As an additional benefit it will log all actions performed on database directly, without EF.– EvkMay 25, 2016 at 19:38
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I've asked to use database triggers. I was told not to. That is why I'm having to seek alternative solutions.– RodMay 25, 2016 at 20:24
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1Hope they also provided some arguments in addition to that "no".– EvkMay 25, 2016 at 20:37
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Take a look at Audit.EntityFramework library.– thepirat000Sep 8, 2016 at 14:18
2 Answers
Well, there are some options, based on what your need is. I think auditing is best done on a database level due to performance and to audit changes made outside the entity framework context. Depending on the Sql Server version and edition you might be able to use build-in features like https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc280386.aspx
If you need to include application level data you might be able to include it in combination with using an interceptor (see https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/data/dn469464.aspx#BuildingBlocks.Result)
Another option that comes to mind is writing some auditing logic in an override of SaveChanges (see https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc716714(v=vs.100).aspx). This will only affect saves and not reads...
Auditing can still only be achieving by either implementing yourself or using a third-party library even for EF6 or EF Core.
Disclaimer: I'm the owner of the project Entity Framework Plus
This library support EF5, EF6 and EF Core and has multiple MUST-HAVE features like AutoSave in the Database.
// using Z.EntityFramework.Plus; // Don't forget to include this.
var ctx = new EntityContext();
// ... ctx changes ...
var audit = new Audit();
audit.CreatedBy = "ZZZ Projects"; // Optional
ctx.SaveChanges(audit);
// Access to all auditing information
var entries = audit.Entries;
foreach(var entry in entries)
{
foreach(var property in entry.Properties)
{
}
}
Documentation: EF+ Audit
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Jonathan, I think it's great that you answer questions like this. Also you always appropriately mention your personal interest (disclaimer). However, I think it would be better to mark questions like these as duplicate of a similar one that you answered before. You could choose one of your answers as a canonical answer that you can update whenever you think new information about your library is helpful. The duplicates will serve as signposts to this answer. May 25, 2016 at 20:11
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1Thank Gert for your feedback. I personally dislike “Duplicate” since they are never personalized to the current user/question, but I will try to mark them more often as duplicate to another of my answer. I will try to do as you mentioned unless the answer requires some code customization. May 25, 2016 at 22:08
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Thanks! Yes, it's always a fine balance whether or not a question is different enough to merit its own answer. Maybe this one was - your first sentence answers what the OP actually asked. Anyway, four other votes are required before a question really goes down as duplicate, so it doesn't only depend on your opinion. May 25, 2016 at 22:19