I have been developing a project for my internship for a while and I may have set up the structure incorrectly as additional updates are constantly requested during the project development process. There are 2 separate contexts in my project; one for Identity and the other for my own entities. My problem is: I want to create Identity tables according to CustomUser in EntityLayer (no problem here) and then I want to associate Identity (ie user) with my own entities. Although I haven't defined customusers in the context in dataaccess here, it goes and creates the CustomUser table and establishes the relations with it, but what I want is to set it up with Identity.
As here, relations with EmployeeDemands, EmployeeServices or other tables should be established directly with AspNetUsers, not CustomUser, and I could not solve this problem.
Code in UI Layer Context for Identity.
using EntityLayer.Concrete;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Identity.EntityFrameworkCore;
using Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore;
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;
using System.Linq;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Identity;
namespace CompanyPanelUI.Data
{
public class ApplicationDbContext : IdentityDbContext<CustomUser>
{
public ApplicationDbContext(DbContextOptions<ApplicationDbContext> options)
: base(options)
{
}
}
}
using Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore;
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using EntityLayer.Concrete;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Identity.EntityFrameworkCore;
namespace DataAccessLayer.Concrete
{
public class Context:DbContext
{
protected override void OnConfiguring(DbContextOptionsBuilder optionsBuilder)
{
optionsBuilder.UseSqlServer("server=(localdb)\\MSSQLLocalDB;database=CompanyPanelNew_DB; integrated security=true;");
}
public DbSet<Demand> Demands {get; set;}
public DbSet<Firm> Firms {get; set;}
public DbSet<Service> Services {get; set;}
public DbSet<FirmService> FirmServices {get; set;}
public DbSet<User> Users { get; set;}
public DbSet<DemandAnswer> DemandAnswers { get; set;}
public DbSet<DemandFile> DemandFiles { get; set;}
public DbSet<Department> Departments { get; set; }
public DbSet<DepartmentEmployee> DepartmentEmployees { get; set; }
public DbSet<EmployeeService> EmployeeServices { get; set; }
public DbSet<EmployeeDemand> EmployeeDemands { get; set; }
}
}
EntityLayer CustomUser
using EntityLayer.Concrete;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Identity;
using System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations;
namespace EntityLayer.Concrete
{
public class CustomUser:IdentityUser
{
[Display(Name = "Ad Soyad")]
public string NameSurname { get; set; }
[Display(Name = "Başvurulan Şirket")]
public string ApplicationFirm { get; set; }
[Display(Name = "Firma Id")]
public int? FirmId { get; set; }
[Display(Name = "Bolum Id")]
public int? DepartmentId { get; set; }
}
}
As an example, the relationship I'm trying to establish in the EmployeeServices table.
using System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations;
namespace EntityLayer.Concrete
{
public class EmployeeService
{
[Key]
public int EmployeeServicesId { get; set; }
public int ServiceId { get; set; }
public Service Services { get; set; }
public string Id { get; set; }
public CustomUser User { get; set; }
}
}