141

I'm trying to determine how to count the matching rows on a table using the EntityFramework.

The problem is that each row might have many megabytes of data (in a Binary field). Of course the SQL would be something like this:

SELECT COUNT(*) FROM [MyTable] WHERE [fkID] = '1';

I could load all of the rows and then find the Count with:

var owner = context.MyContainer.Where(t => t.ID == '1');
owner.MyTable.Load();
var count = owner.MyTable.Count();

But that is grossly inefficient. Is there a simpler way?


EDIT: Thanks, all. I've moved the DB from a private attached so I can run profiling; this helps but causes confusions I didn't expect.

And my real data is a bit deeper, I'll use Trucks carrying Pallets of Cases of Items -- and I don't want the Truck to leave unless there is at least one Item in it.

My attempts are shown below. The part I don't get is that CASE_2 never access the DB server (MSSQL).

var truck = context.Truck.FirstOrDefault(t => (t.ID == truckID));
if (truck == null)
    return "Invalid Truck ID: " + truckID;
var dlist = from t in ve.Truck
    where t.ID == truckID
    select t.Driver;
if (dlist.Count() == 0)
    return "No Driver for this Truck";

var plist = from t in ve.Truck where t.ID == truckID
    from r in t.Pallet select r;
if (plist.Count() == 0)
    return "No Pallets are in this Truck";
#if CASE_1
/// This works fine (using 'plist'):
var list1 = from r in plist
    from c in r.Case
    from i in c.Item
    select i;
if (list1.Count() == 0)
    return "No Items are in the Truck";
#endif

#if CASE_2
/// This never executes any SQL on the server.
var list2 = from r in truck.Pallet
        from c in r.Case
        from i in c.Item
        select i;
bool ok = (list.Count() > 0);
if (!ok)
    return "No Items are in the Truck";
#endif

#if CASE_3
/// Forced loading also works, as stated in the OP...
bool ok = false;
foreach (var pallet in truck.Pallet) {
    pallet.Case.Load();
    foreach (var kase in pallet.Case) {
        kase.Item.Load();
        var item = kase.Item.FirstOrDefault();
        if (item != null) {
            ok = true;
            break;
        }
    }
    if (ok) break;
}
if (!ok)
    return "No Items are in the Truck";
#endif

And the SQL resulting from CASE_1 is piped through sp_executesql, but:

SELECT [Project1].[C1] AS [C1]
FROM   ( SELECT cast(1 as bit) AS X ) AS [SingleRowTable1]
LEFT OUTER JOIN  (SELECT 
    [GroupBy1].[A1] AS [C1]
    FROM ( SELECT 
        COUNT(cast(1 as bit)) AS [A1]
        FROM   [dbo].[PalletTruckMap] AS [Extent1]
        INNER JOIN [dbo].[PalletCaseMap] AS [Extent2] ON [Extent1].[PalletID] = [Extent2].[PalletID]
        INNER JOIN [dbo].[Item] AS [Extent3] ON [Extent2].[CaseID] = [Extent3].[CaseID]
        WHERE [Extent1].[TruckID] = '....'
    )  AS [GroupBy1] ) AS [Project1] ON 1 = 1

[I don't really have Trucks, Drivers, Pallets, Cases or Items; as you can see from the SQL the Truck-Pallet and Pallet-Case relationships are many-to-many -- although I don't think that matters. My real objects are intangibles and harder to describe, so I changed the names.]

1
  • 1
    how did you solve the pallet loading problem? May 26, 2016 at 2:58

7 Answers 7

149

Query syntax:

var count = (from o in context.MyContainer
             where o.ID == '1'
             from t in o.MyTable
             select t).Count();

Method syntax:

var count = context.MyContainer
            .Where(o => o.ID == '1')
            .SelectMany(o => o.MyTable)
            .Count()

Both generate the same SQL query.

7
  • 1
    Why the SelectMany()? Is it needed? Wouldn't it work proper without it?
    – Jo Smo
    Jul 4, 2015 at 17:29
  • 1
    @JoSmo, no, that's a totally different query. Jul 8, 2015 at 18:28
  • Thank you for clearing that up for me. Just wanted to be sure. :)
    – Jo Smo
    Jul 8, 2015 at 18:39
  • 2
    Can you tell me why is it different with the SelectMany? I don't understand. I do it without SelectMany but it gets really slow because I have over 20 million records. I tried the answer from Yang Zhang and works great, just wanted to know what the SelectMany does.
    – mikesoft
    Oct 20, 2016 at 17:45
  • 2
    @AustinFelipe Without the call to SelectMany, the query would return the number of rows in MyContainer with the ID equal to '1'. The SelectMany call returns all rows in MyTable that belong to the previous result of the query (meaning the result of MyContainer.Where(o => o.ID == '1'))
    – sbecker
    Aug 7, 2017 at 9:14
65

I think you want something like

var count = context.MyTable.Count(t => t.MyContainer.ID == '1');

(edited to reflect comments)

5
  • 1
    No, he needs the count of the entities in MyTable referenced by the one entity with ID = 1 in MyContainer May 20, 2009 at 21:47
  • 3
    Incidentally, if t.ID is a PK, then count in the code above will always be 1. :) May 20, 2009 at 21:50
  • 2
    @Craig, you're right, I should have used t.ForeignTable.ID. Updated.
    – Kevin
    May 20, 2009 at 22:07
  • 2
    Well this is short and simple. My choice is: var count = context.MyTable.Count(t => t.MyContainer.ID == '1'); not long and ugly: var count = (from o in context.MyContainer where o.ID == '1' from t in o.MyTable select t).Count(); But it depends on coding style...
    – C.L.
    May 8, 2013 at 12:11
  • make sure you include "using System.Linq", or this wont work Mar 2, 2016 at 16:13
18

As I understand it, the selected answer still loads all of the related tests. According to this msdn blog, there is a better way.

http://blogs.msdn.com/b/adonet/archive/2011/01/31/using-dbcontext-in-ef-feature-ctp5-part-6-loading-related-entities.aspx

Specifically

using (var context = new UnicornsContext())

    var princess = context.Princesses.Find(1);

    // Count how many unicorns the princess owns 
    var unicornHaul = context.Entry(princess)
                      .Collection(p => p.Unicorns)
                      .Query()
                      .Count();
}
1
  • 5
    There is no need to make extra Find(1) request. Just create the entity and attach to the context: var princess = new PrincessEntity{ Id = 1 }; context.Princesses.Attach(princess);
    – tenbits
    Feb 4, 2016 at 16:27
16

This is my code:

IQueryable<AuctionRecord> records = db.AuctionRecord;
var count = records.Count();

Make sure the variable is defined as IQueryable then when you use Count() method, EF will execute something like

select count(*) from ...

Otherwise, if the records is defined as IEnumerable, the sql generated will query the entire table and count rows returned.

10

Well, even the SELECT COUNT(*) FROM Table will be fairly inefficient, especially on large tables, since SQL Server really can't do anything but do a full table scan (clustered index scan).

Sometimes, it's good enough to know an approximate number of rows from the database, and in such a case, a statement like this might suffice:

SELECT 
    SUM(used_page_count) * 8 AS SizeKB,
    SUM(row_count) AS [RowCount], 
    OBJECT_NAME(OBJECT_ID) AS TableName
FROM 
    sys.dm_db_partition_stats
WHERE 
    OBJECT_ID = OBJECT_ID('YourTableNameHere')
    AND (index_id = 0 OR index_id = 1)
GROUP BY 
    OBJECT_ID

This will inspect the dynamic management view and extract the number of rows and the table size from it, given a specific table. It does so by summing up the entries for the heap (index_id = 0) or the clustered index (index_id = 1).

It's quick, it's easy to use, but it's not guaranteed to be 100% accurate or up to date. But in many cases, this is "good enough" (and put much less burden on the server).

Maybe that would work for you, too? Of course, to use it in EF, you'd have to wrap this up in a stored proc or use a straight "Execute SQL query" call.

Marc

3
  • 1
    It won't be a full table scan due to the FK reference in the WHERE. Only details of the master will be scanned. The performance issue he was having was from loading blob data, not record count. Presuming there aren't typically tens of thouusands + of detail records per master record, I wouldn't "optimize" something which isn't actually slow. May 21, 2009 at 12:55
  • OK, yes, in that case, you'll only select a subset - that should be fine. As for the blob data - I was under the impression you could set a "deferred loading" on any column in any of your EF tables to avoid loading it, so that might help.
    – marc_s
    May 21, 2009 at 16:35
  • Is there a way to use this SQL with the EntityFramework? Anyway, in this case I only needed to know there were matching rows, but I intentionally asked the question more generally.
    – NVRAM
    May 22, 2009 at 17:38
6

Use the ExecuteStoreQuery method of the entity context. This avoids downloading the entire result set and deserializing into objects to do a simple row count.

   int count;

    using (var db = new MyDatabase()){
      string sql = "SELECT COUNT(*) FROM MyTable where FkId = {0}";

      object[] myParams = {1};
      var cntQuery = db.ExecuteStoreQuery<int>(sql, myParams);

      count = cntQuery.First<int>();
    }
2
  • 6
    If you write int count = context.MyTable.Count(m => m.MyContainerID == '1') then the generated SQL will resemble exactly what you're doing, but the code is much nicer. No entities are loaded into memory as such. Try it out in LINQPad if you like -- it will show you the SQL used under the covers. Aug 4, 2012 at 16:27
  • 1
    In-line SQL . . not my favorite thing.
    – Duanne
    Mar 2, 2017 at 21:18
3

I think this should work...

var query = from m in context.MyTable
            where m.MyContainerId == '1' // or what ever the foreign key name is...
            select m;

var count = query.Count();
2
  • This is the direction I went at first, too, but it's my understanding that unless you've manually added it, m will have a MyContainer property but no MyContainerId. Hence, what you want to examine is m.MyContainer.ID.
    – Kevin
    May 20, 2009 at 22:14
  • If MyContainer is the parent and MyTable are the children in the relationship then you had to establish that relationship with some foreign key, I am not sure how else you would know which MyTable entities where a associated with a MyContainer entity... But maybe I made an assumption about the structure...
    – bytebender
    May 21, 2009 at 15:45

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