问题
I'm working on building a custom module in Orchard CMS, and I have the following Controller Action:
public ActionResult Inventory()
{
var models = _repository.Get<MyModel>();
return View(new MyViewModel() { MyModels = models.ToList() });
}
Now, when Orchard builds this, an exception occurs, because NHibernate has picked up MyModel because its being looked at as a PartRecord, which I do not want it to be.
The exception is method get_Id should be 'public/protected virtual' or 'protected internal virtual'.
I can add virtual to the properties, but I want to avoid having NHibernate have any part in looking at this object, it is unnecessary.
My question is, how can I add a Model, access that model in a view and suppress Orchard from treating it as a PartRecord? I actually use the model in a separate repository, separate from the Orchard DB.
EDIT: Additional Information
_repository is an IDbRepository, pointing to my own DB instance MyModel is a POCO for my data. I'm trying avoid putting virtual on the properties in MyModel, I have them in here, to illustrate where I'm trying to avoid them.
public interface IDbRepository : IDependency
{
T Find<T>(long id) where T : class, IActiveRecord;
bool Update<T>(T record) where T : class, IActiveRecord;
bool Remove<T>(T record) where T : class, IActiveRecord;
}
public class MyModel : IActiveRecord
{
[Key]
public virtual long Id { get; set; }
public virtual int SupplierProductId { get; set; }
public virtual int SupplierId { get; set; }
public virtual int ProductId { get; set; }
}
In addition to this, my module does have a settings part that I've created, that does get stored in Orchard DB and is edited in the site settings. I'm using a handler to control that. However, I've tried removing the handler and a few other things to keep Orchard from taking my object into NHibernate.
回答1:
Orchard auto-mapping configuration assumes that any class will be mapped if the following conditions are met:
- the namespace ends with ".Models" or ".Records"
- there is an
Id
property, with virtual accessors - the class is neither sealed nor abstract
- the class doesn't implement
IContent
or inherits fromContentPartRecord
So if you prevent any of those criteria from being true, you should be good. For instance, defining your classes in a namespace not ending with .Models
or .Records
should be sufficient.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7840250/orchard-custom-module-model-being-picked-up-by-nhibernate-requiring-virtual