2

I am trying to create a many to many relationship using EFCore on the same user class which I have based on EntityFrameworkCore.IdentityUser following the instructions described here, here and here. I have the following user class:

public class MyApplicationUser : IdentityUser
{
    public virtual ICollection<MyApplicationUserJunction> MyApplicationUsers { get; set; }
    public virtual ICollection<MyApplicationUserJunction> ManagingMyApplicationUsers { get; set; }
}

Here is my joining table:

public class MyApplicationUserJunction
{
    public int MyApplicationUserId { get; set; }
    public virtual MyApplicationUser MyApplicationUser { get; set; }
    public int ManagedMyApplicationUserId { get; set; }
    public virtual MyApplicationUser ManagedMyApplicationUser { get; set; }
}

Here is my OnModelConfiguring:

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

    builder.Entity<MyApplicationUserJunction>()
        .HasKey(uj => new { uj.ManagedMyApplicationUserId, uj.MyApplicationUserId});

    builder.Entity<MyApplicationUserJunction>()
        .HasOne(uj => uj.MyApplicationUser)
        .WithMany(qu => qu.MyApplicationUsers)
        .HasForeignKey(uj => uj.MyApplicationUserId).OnDelete(DeleteBehavior.Restrict);

    builder.Entity<MyApplicationUserJunction>()
        .HasOne(uj => uj.ManagedMyApplicationUser)
        .WithMany(qu => qu.ManagingMyApplicationUsers)
        .HasForeignKey(uj => uj.ManagedMyApplicationUserId);
}

Whenever I run the EFCore tools add migrations command, I get the following error:

The relationship from 'MyApplicationUserJunction.MyApplicationUser' to 'MyApplicationUser.MyApplicationUsers' with foreign key properties {'MyApplicationUserId' : int} cannot target the primary key {'Id' : string} because it is not compatible. Configure a principal key or a set of compatible foreign key properties for this relationship.

I am using the EntityFrameworkCore.Tools.DotNet package 1.0.0-preview3-final.

I have tried only using a single navigation property on the User class, and I've tried not specifying the WithMany function as described here but with no success.

5
  • 1
    Read the docs for IdentityUser.Id and have a look at the type. The foreign key property has to be the same type
    – Sir Rufo
    Sep 10, 2017 at 22:17
  • Thank you! I'll look at using int as the primary key in UserIdentity.
    – majjam
    Sep 10, 2017 at 22:52
  • Have you managed to get it working? if yes please answer the question to share the knowledge. Dec 14, 2017 at 5:11
  • 1
    Apologies @MohammedNoureldin I did get it working, I'll post an answer later today.
    – majjam
    Dec 14, 2017 at 10:18
  • @MohammedNoureldin answered, please let me know if I've missed anything, its been a while since I made those changes
    – majjam
    Dec 14, 2017 at 22:36

1 Answer 1

2

To get this working with EF Core 1, following Sir Rufo's suggestion above I specified the type of the TKey:

public class MyApplicationUser : IdentityUser<int>
{
    public virtual ICollection<MyApplicationUserJunction> MyApplicationUsers { get; set; }
    public virtual ICollection<MyApplicationUserJunction> ManagingMyApplicationUsers { get; set; }
}

and in the context:

public class MyApplicationContext : IdentityDbContext<MyApplicationUser, IdentityRole<int>, int>
{
    ...

and in the AddIdentity section in ConfigureServices which also uses the generic IdentityRole:

services.AddIdentity<MyApplicationUser, IdentityRole<int>>(config =>
        {
            config.User.RequireUniqueEmail = true;
            config.Password.RequiredLength = 8;
            config.Cookies.ApplicationCookie.LoginPath = "/Auth/Login";
        })
        .AddEntityFrameworkStores<MyApplicationContext, int>();

I then upgraded this to EF Core 2 which require some other alterations to get the Identity working. As described by pealmeid here you have to derive from the IdentityRole:

public class MyRole : IdentityRole<int>
{
    public MyRole() : base()
    {
    }

    public MyRole(string roleName)
    {
        Name = roleName;
    }
}

Used in ConfigureServices:

public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
        {
            services.AddIdentity<MyApplicationUser, MyRole>(config =>
            {
                config.User.RequireUniqueEmail = true;
                config.Password.RequiredLength = 8;
            }).AddEntityFrameworkStores<MyApplicationContext>();
            ...

I was also using cookie authentication before which is no longer configured in the AddIdentity config lambda but is instead done at the services level:

public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
    {
        services.ConfigureApplicationCookie(options => options.LoginPath = "/Auth/Login");
        ...

Also a slight change to the DbContext signature to use the derived role type:

public class MyApplicationContext : IdentityDbContext<MyApplicationUser, MyRole, int>
{
1
  • Thank you! actually that is what I was waiting to see, the second ICollection Property. I was not sure if that is the proper way. Dec 15, 2017 at 2:03

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

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