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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.

enter image description here

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; }
    }
}

1 Answer 1

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You should configure the Users table in your ApplicationDbContext like below :

public class ApplicationDbContext : IdentityDbContext<CustomUser>
{
        public ApplicationDbContext(DbContextOptions<ApplicationDbContext> options)
            : base(options)
        {
        }

        protected override void OnModelCreating(ModelBuilder builder)
        {
            base.OnModelCreating(builder); 
            builder.Entity<CustomUser>().ToTable("CustomUser"); 
           // This will configure the table name of the Identity users table. 
           // If you wish you can rename the other tables too.           
        }
}

You may want to recreate the database. And a side not you also may want to ignore the migrations generated for the CustomUser entity in the Context DbContext. To Achieve this you should configure the CustomUser entity in the Context DbContext:

builder.Entity<CustomUser>().ToTable("CustomUser", build => build.ExcludeFromMigrations());
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  • I changed the name of the context in the UI layer that I used for Identity and hoped this would solve my problem. However, when I tried to establish my own relations in the DataAccess layer and first created the Identity tables, I got an error like this. "There is already an object named 'CustomUser' in the database." Mar 2, 2022 at 6:52
  • Why does it insist on creating the CustomUser table even though I add it to the context? Mar 2, 2022 at 6:53
  • When I look at the migrations, the modelBuilder entity and the custom user are determined and it is created with the create table from its name. Mar 2, 2022 at 6:54
  • 1
    @MertÖzler because you have 2 DbContexts and they create their own entity. See the updated answer for the solution to that.
    – Eldar
    Mar 2, 2022 at 7:00
  • This solved my problem, I'm really grateful to you. I would love to be able to guide junior programmers like you one day, thanks again. Mar 2, 2022 at 7:11

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