1

I want to change the identity table's name. I googled around and found the following methods:

The first one:

protected override void OnModelCreating(ModelBuilder builder)
{
    base.OnModelCreating(builder);


    builder.Entity<ApplicationUser>(entity =>
    {
        entity.ToTable(name: "Users");
    });

    builder.Entity<ApplicationRole>(entity =>
    {
        entity.ToTable(name: "Roles");
    });

    builder.Entity<ApplicationRoleClaim>(entity =>
    {
        entity.ToTable(name: "RoleClaims");
    });

    builder.Entity<ApplicationUserRole>(entity =>
    {
        entity.ToTable(name: "UserRoles");
    });

    builder.Entity<ApplicationUserLogin>(entity =>
    {
        entity.ToTable(name: "UserLogins");
    });

    builder.Entity<ApplicationUserClaim>(entity =>
    {
        entity.ToTable(name: "UserClaims");
     });

    builder.Entity<ApplicationUserToken>(entity =>
    {
        entity.ToTable(name: "UserTokens");
    });
 }

The second one:

    protected override void OnModelCreating(ModelBuilder builder)
    {
        base.OnModelCreating(builder);

        builder.Entity<ApplicationUser>().ToTable("Users");
        builder.Entity<ApplicationRole>().ToTable("Roles");
        builder.Entity<ApplicationRoleClaim>().ToTable("RoleClaims");
        builder.Entity<ApplicationUserRole>().ToTable("UserRoles");
        builder.Entity<ApplicationUserClaim>().ToTable("UserClaims");
        builder.Entity<ApplicationUserToken>().ToTable("UserTokens");
        builder.Entity<ApplicationUserLogin>().ToTable("UserLogins");
    }

All the generic names, like ApplicationUser, ApplicationRole, etc., have "int" as their primary key.

The ApplicationDbContext and StartUp looks like the following

ApplicationDbContext

public class ApplicationDbContext : IdentityDbContext<ApplicationUser, ApplicationRole, int>

StartUp class

       services.AddDbContext<ApplicationDbContext>(options =>
            options.UseMySql(Configuration.GetConnectionString("MySQLConnection")));

        services.AddIdentity<ApplicationUser, ApplicationRole>()
            .AddEntityFrameworkStores<ApplicationDbContext>()
            .AddDefaultTokenProviders();

If you noticed, on the start-up class, I didn't add an int on AddEntityFrameworkStores<ApplicationDbContext>(). Because, a compiler error keeps showing up saying "Not supported....".

And I did the following to remove the old database and migration

$ drop-database
$ remove-migration

To add the new configuration

$ add-migration Initial
$ update-database

I found that only the users and roles tables are changed, but not the others (AspUserRoles, AspUserClaim, etc.).

FYI:

I am using Visual Studio 2017. My project uses the default Web Application with Individual User Account selected and .NET Core 2. I am also using Pomela.EntityFramework.MySql as my database provider.

My question is: "What am I doing wrong?" Or what's changed?

2 Answers 2

4

You need to tell IdentityDbContext about all of your custom types. In order to do that, you'll need to expand out the generics you pass through to IdentityDbContext, like so:

public class ApplicationDbContext : IdentityDbContext<ApplicationUser,
    ApplicationRole, int, ApplicationUserClaim, ApplicationUserRole,
    ApplicationUserLogin, ApplicationRoleClaim, ApplicationUserToken>
2
  • I have a same code to define my DbContext class and used same codes like what @ash has used but all of the Identity tables have AspNet prefix in the database yet! Do you have any tip 4 me please? Nov 25, 2018 at 13:24
  • @RAM There's nothing obvious that stands out. If you decide to ask this as a new question with your specific details, feel free to let me know and I'll take a look. Nov 25, 2018 at 19:35
0

You need to do the following steps:

  1. Add the table names you want as per code below:

    protected override void OnModelCreating(ModelBuilder builder)
    {
       base.OnModelCreating(builder);    
       builder.Entity<ApplicationUser>().ToTable("Users");
       builder.Entity<ApplicationRole>().ToTable("Roles");
       builder.Entity<ApplicationRoleClaim>().ToTable("RoleClaims");
       builder.Entity<ApplicationUserRole>().ToTable("UserRoles");
       builder.Entity<ApplicationUserClaim>().ToTable("UserClaims");
       builder.Entity<ApplicationUserToken>().ToTable("UserTokens");
       builder.Entity<ApplicationUserLogin>().ToTable("UserLogins");
    }
    
  2. Open the Package Manager Console and run the following command:

    Add-Migration MyTablesRenamed

    You will see a new file created in the application with all commands to rename the tables and some more commands.

  3. Run Update-Database

Done, your tables should be renamed now.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.