Julie Lerman gives a nice way to deal with how to update an entire aggregate in her book Programming Entity Framework: DbContext.
As she writes:
When a disconnected entity graph arrives on the server side, the
server will not know the state of the entities. You need to provide a
way for the state to be discovered so that the context can be made
aware of each entity’s state.
This technique is called painting the state
.
There are mainly two ways to do that:
- Iterate through the graph using your knowledge of the model and set the state for each entity
- Build a generic approach to track state
The second option is really nice and consists in creating an interface that every entity in your model will implement. Julie uses an IObjectWithState
interface that tells the current state of the entity:
public interface IObjectWithState
{
State State { get; set; }
}
public enum State
{
Added,
Unchanged,
Modified,
Deleted
}
First thing you have to do is to automatically set the state to Unchanged
for every entity retrieved from the DB, by adding a constructor in your Context
class that hooks up an event:
public YourContext()
{
((IObjectContextAdapter)this).ObjectContext
.ObjectMaterialized += (sender, args) =>
{
var entity = args.Entity as IObjectWithState;
if (entity != null)
{
entity.State = State.Unchanged;
}
};
}
Then change your Order
and OrderItem
classes to implement the IObjectWithState
interface and call this ApplyChanges
method accepting the root entity as parameter:
private static void ApplyChanges<TEntity>(TEntity root)
where TEntity : class, IObjectWithState
{
using (var context = new YourContext())
{
context.Set<TEntity>().Add(root);
CheckForEntitiesWithoutStateInterface(context);
foreach (var entry in context.ChangeTracker
.Entries<IObjectWithState>())
{
IObjectWithState stateInfo = entry.Entity;
entry.State = ConvertState(stateInfo.State);
}
context.SaveChanges();
}
}
private static void CheckForEntitiesWithoutStateInterface(YourContext context)
{
var entitiesWithoutState =
from e in context.ChangeTracker.Entries()
where !(e.Entity is IObjectWithState)
select e;
if (entitiesWithoutState.Any())
{
throw new NotSupportedException("All entities must implement IObjectWithState");
}
}
Last but not least, do not forget to set the right state of your graph entities before calling ApplyChanges
;-) (You could even mix Modified
and Deleted
states within the same graph.)
Julie proposes to go even further in her book:
you may find yourself wanting to be more granular with the way
modified properties are tracked. Rather than marking the entire entity
as modified, you might want only the properties that have actually
changed to be marked as modified.
In addition to marking an entity as modified, the client is also
responsible for recording which properties have been modified. One way
to do this would be to add a list of modified property names to the
state tracking interface.
But as my answer is already too long, go read her book if you want to know more ;-)