I\'m developing a plugin application with EF6, code first.
I have one main context with an entity called User
:
public class MainDataCont
When you add the Booking entity, don't use the DbSet.Add()
method. Instead use the DbSet.Attach()
method and set the DbContext.Entry(Entity).State
property for the Booking to EntityState.Added
and make sure the DbContext.Entry(Entity).State
for User stays EntityState.Unchanged
.
So for example instead of doing this:
pluginDataContext.dbBooking.Add(myNewBooking);
Do this:
pluginDataContext.dbBooking.Attach(myNewBooking);
pluginDataContext.Entry(myNewBooking).State = EntityState.Added;
This is because the Add()
method marks all entities in the object graph as EntityState.Added
which will cause inserts without checking if the entity already exists in the database. The Attach()
method simply makes the context begin tracking the entity.
This is why I almost never use DbSet.Add()
.
This solution could help you:Entity Framework 6 Code First Migrations with Multiple Data Contexts. However, in this case, both context are in the same project. I don't know if works with contexts that are in two different projects (I think it should if you are using the same class to map User). As the blog said, you need to comment the generated code related to the Users table when you run the Add-Migration
command for the PluginX Context.
When you work with multiple contexts you have two options:
You can try using views, declare the user as a view in PluginDataContext and when you perform the migration, type the method "create User view as ...", this allows you to relate the book to the user.