I'd like to be able to build a parameterized ad-hoc SQL query using Entity Framework which consumes a table-valued parameter.
NB: The use-case which brought this to my interest was querying for multiple entities given a list of IDs. I want the query planner to be able to cache the plan if possible, but I don't necessarily want to create a stored procedure.
Suppose I have some ids:
IEnumerable<int> ids = new [] {0, 42, -1};
If I write an EF query like
context.MyEntities
.Where(e => ids.Contains(e.Id))
the generated sql is not parameterized, and looks like this:
SELECT
[Extent1].[Name] AS [Name]
FROM [MyEntities] AS [Extent1]
WHERE [Extent1].[Id] IN (0, 42, -1)
What I want to get instead is something like
SELECT
[Extent1].[Name] AS [Name]
FROM [MyEntities] AS [Extent1]
WHERE EXISTS (SELECT
1
FROM @ids AS [Extent2]
WHERE [Extent2].[Id] = [Extent1].[Id]
)
which is fully-parameterized.
Can this be done in an EF ad-hoc query?
I am aware that it is possible to pass table-valued parameters to direct queries using EF (e.g. to a stored procedure), using a SqlParameter
with SqlDbType.Structured
and a DataTable
as its value (see https://stackoverflow.com/a/10409710/5181199). When I try the same trick to create an IQueryable
version of my ids
, I'm surprised to find the generated SQL actually enumerates the values so it looks like the first (unwanted) SQL example I gave! It also complains The SqlParameter is already contained by another SqlParameterCollection
when I try to execute the query.
One hacky way which just about works is to transform the IEnumerable
IDs into an IQueryable
in the following way:
- Join the values into a single delimited string
joined
- Make some kind of string-splitting-and-parsing function with a table-valued output on the DB side (
MyStringSplit
) - Create an EF 'complex type' for the output structure of the above function, like
public class IntId { public int Id { get; set; } }
- Use
((IObjectContextAdapter)context).ObjectContext.CreateQuery<IntId>("MyStringSplit(@joined)", new ObjectParameter("joined", joined))
to create anIQueryable
of my IDs.
This produces something like
SELECT
[Extent1].[Name] AS [Name]
FROM [MyEntities] AS [Extent1]
WHERE [Extent1].[Id] IN (SELECT
1
FROM [MyStringSplit](@joined) AS [Extent2]
WHERE [Extent2].[Id] = [Extent1].[Id]
)
which is close to what I'm after, but is messy and surely doesn't provide the performance benefits of actual table-valued parameters.
EDIT: To clarify, what I have in mind is some kind of nice c#-side abstraction which I can use to 'transform' my IEnumerable
collections into IQueryable
representations (for a particular context) which get interpreted as table-valued parameters when consumed by EF. We can assume that the necessary table types are already defined SQL-side (e.g. a table type for integer IDs, a table type for string IDs...)
CREATE TYPE
statements with the right structure and maybe dropping them later in a sort of garbage-collected way", then no. Does this assume the requisite TVP type has already been created and the only ad-hoc part is the query itself? T-SQL itself has no ad-hoc way to pass table-structured data (if you don't count encoding things in XML or JSON), so it's not really surprising EF doesn't expose something like that.