I\'m using Dapper to hammer out some load testing tools that need to access a PostgreSQL database. This particular version of PostgreSQL does not support GUIDs natively, so
I hacked a solution together. As far as I can tell, there is no way to instruct Dapper to generate alternate binding code for a particular type so I modified the GetClassDeserializer
method to force the unbox type to string if the property is a guid.
Next I re-used the code that generates a constructor call for enums.
Here's the modified code snippet (starting at line 761 of rev. rf6d62f91f31a) :
// unbox nullable enums as the primitive, i.e. byte etc
var nullUnderlyingType = Nullable.GetUnderlyingType( item.Info.Type );
var unboxType = nullUnderlyingType != null && nullUnderlyingType.IsEnum ? nullUnderlyingType : item.Info.Type;
if( unboxType == typeof(Guid))
{
unboxType = typeof (string);
}
il.Emit( OpCodes.Unbox_Any, unboxType ); // stack is now [target][target][typed-value]
if ( ( item.Info.Type == typeof( Guid ) && unboxType == typeof( string ) )
|| ( nullUnderlyingType != null && nullUnderlyingType.IsEnum ) )
{
il.Emit( OpCodes.Newobj, item.Info.Type.GetConstructor( new[] { nullUnderlyingType ?? unboxType} ) );
}
il.Emit( OpCodes.Callvirt, item.Info.Setter ); // stack is now [target]
It looks like there is UUID type in PostgreSQL already. But @Cpt.Ohlund's solution is still great for MySQL/MariaDB in 2020.
But the solution might cause problems itself.
When VARCHAR(36)
is used for System.Guid
the following exception is thrown:
System.InvalidCastException: Invalid cast from 'System.String' to 'System.Guid'.
@Cpt.Ohlund's solution makes it work.
But if the column is CHAR(36)
then it is mapped to System.Guid
automatically! And if @Cpt.Ohlund's solution is applied there will be another exception:
System.InvalidCastException: Unable to cast object of type 'System.Guid' to type 'System.String'.
The exception is caused by an instance System.Guid
passed to Parse(object value)
instead of a string.
So the simple answer is to use CHAR(36)
in MySQL and MariaDB and it will just work.
But if you need to handle any string type of the column you have to use an improved @Cpt.Ohlund's solution:
public class MySqlGuidTypeHandler : SqlMapper.TypeHandler<Guid>
{
public override void SetValue(IDbDataParameter parameter, Guid guid)
{
parameter.Value = guid.ToString();
}
public override Guid Parse(object value)
{
// Dapper may pass a Guid instead of a string
if (value is Guid)
return (Guid)value;
return new Guid((string)value);
}
}
And register it using SqlMapper.AddTypeHandler()
.
This is an old question but I feel it needs updating as Dapper now supports private properties, which Marc referenced to in his answer.
private String UserIDString { get; set; }
public Guid UserID
{
get
{
return new Guid(UserIDString);
}
private set
{
UserID = value;
}
}
Then in SQL give your ID column an alias to map it to the private property and not the actual property:
SELECT UserID AS UserIDString FROM....
Perhaps the simplest way to do this (without waiting on dapper) is to have a second property:
public Guid Foo {get;set;}
public string FooString {
get { return Foo.ToString("N"); }
set { Foo = new Guid(value); }
}
And in your query, alias the column as FooString
.
Of course, then this prompts the question: should dapper support private properties for this type of thing? To which I say: probably.
I'm using MySql but it has the same problem since I store the Guid as a string. To fix the mapping without having to alias the column i used the following:
public class MySqlGuidTypeHandler : SqlMapper.TypeHandler<Guid>
{
public override void SetValue(IDbDataParameter parameter, Guid guid)
{
parameter.Value = guid.ToString();
}
public override Guid Parse(object value)
{
return new Guid((string)value);
}
}
And in my Startup.cs:
public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
SqlMapper.AddTypeHandler(new MySqlGuidTypeHandler());
SqlMapper.RemoveTypeMap(typeof(Guid));
SqlMapper.RemoveTypeMap(typeof(Guid?));
}
I hope that can help.
I didn't have to use alias in my query. What I did:
public abstract class Entity
{
protected Entity()
{
Id = Guid.NewGuid().ToString();
}
public string Id
{
get; set;
}
}
And in your table the type as varchar