Fluent nHibernate L2 Caching Not Working On HasMany Items - nhibernate

I’m wondering if I have mis-understood how the L2 caching works. I am trying to cache a ‘HasMany(x => x.Posts)’, Bascially I have a topic that has many posts under it - I was under the impression that if I added the following at the top of my topic map
Cache.ReadWrite().IncludeAll();
its caches map and hasManys until either the underlying data changes of app is restarted? I have my L2 cache configured like so
Fluently.Configure()
.Database(MsSqlConfiguration.MsSql2008.ConnectionString(c => c.FromConnectionStringWithKey("MyAppConString")))
.Cache(c => c.ProviderClass<SysCacheProvider>().UseQueryCache())
.Mappings(m => m.FluentMappings.AddFromAssemblyOf<MembershipUserMap>())
Etc…etc..
In my Topic map I have the following (I have removed a load of the normal maps to shorten it), and you can see the HasMany on the posts.
public TopicMap()
{
Cache.ReadWrite().IncludeAll();
Id(x => x.Id);
Map(x => x.Name);
*lots of other normal maps*
References(x => x.Category).Column("Category_Id");
References(x => x.User).Column("MembershipUser_Id");
References(x => x.LastPost).Column("Post_Id").Nullable();
HasMany(x => x.Posts)
.Cascade.AllDeleteOrphan().KeyColumn("Topic_Id")
.Inverse();
*And a few other HasManys*
}
So if I grab all topics, loop over and do the following
Topic.Posts.Count()
Using SqlProfiler I see the get all posts for each topic (First hit), but if I reload the page I still see all the gets posts for topic queries??
Am I missing something?? I thought this should be cached now??

Ayende has a good post explaining the same problem that you have run into.
Basically, what you have there is caching only IDs of Posts, not the posts itself. Notice that you have enabled caching for Topic entities, but you probably didn't do the same for Post entities in PostMap.
Add Cache.ReadWrite() to PostMap also.
Notice that NHibernate won't be able to do the collection caching right in most of the cases if you are using eager loading with Fetch.Join(), like you have in your other question.
Here's a very good overview of the caching and the problems you might have with eager loading collections.

Related

Fluent NHibernate - How do I create a one to many mapping which has a bridge table in the middle?

How do I create a one to many mapping which has a bridge table in the middle?
I basically have 3 tables: Items, Tags, and TagsToItems.
Each Item can have many Tags as defined by the TagsToItems table. How do I set up this mapping correctly using Fluent NHibernate?
I've been playing with HasMany but haven't quite figured out how this works with a bridge table.
HasMany(x => x.Tags).Table("TagsToItems").KeyColumn("ItemId");
My latest attempt to solve this problem looks like this:
HasManyToMany(x => x.Tags)
.AsBag()
.Table("TagsToItems")
.ParentKeyColumn("ItemId")
.ChildKeyColumn("TagId")
.Cascade.All()
.Inverse();
However this is throwing the error:
Initializing[Namespace.Item#11]-failed to lazily initialize a
collection of role:
Namespace.DataAccess.NHibernate.Entities.Item.Tags, no session or
session was closed
It turns out that the problem is with using the Tags collection associated to an Item.
The Tags collection could not be lazily initialised because by the time I was trying to use it (in my view) the session scope of the NHibernate session had closed.
I solved this by setting .Not.LazyLoad() on the mapping:
HasManyToMany(x => x.Tags)
.AsBag()
.Table("TagsToItems")
.ParentKeyColumn("ItemId")
.ChildKeyColumn("TagId")
.Not.LazyLoad()
.Cascade.All();

NHibernate: Problem trying to save an entity containing collections

I need some help.
I'm just starting out with NHibernate and I'm using Fluent for mappings. Everything seemed to work fine until today.
Here is the story:
I have two tables in my db: Store and WorkDay
The first table contains info about the store, and the WorkDay table contains info about the days of week and start/end time when the store is open.
Store contains a Guid StoreID PK column that is referenced in the WorkDay table.
So I have a mapping file for Store where I have a HasMany association with the WorkDay table, and a corresponding POCO for Store.
Now, when I fill in all the necessary data and try to persist it to database, I get an exception telling me that the insert into table WorkDay failed because the StoreID had null value and the table constraint doesn't allow nulls for that column (which is, of course, expected behavior).
I understand the reason for this exception, but I don't know how to solve it.
The reason why the insert fails is because the StoreID gets generated upon insert, but the [b]WorkDay[/b] collection gets saved first, in the time when the StoreID hasn't yet been generated!
So, how do I force NHibernate to generate this ID to pass it to dependent tables? Or is there another solution for this?
Thank you!
Here's the code for StoreMap
public class StoreMap : ClassMap<Store> {
public StoreMap() {
Id(x => x.StoreID)
.GeneratedBy.GuidComb();
Map(x => x.City);
Map(x => x.Description);
Map(x => x.Email);
Map(x => x.Fax);
Map(x => x.ImageData).CustomType("BinaryBlob");
Map(x => x.ImageMimeType);
Map(x => x.Name);
Map(x => x.Phone);
Map(x => x.Street);
Map(x => x.Zip);
HasMany(x => x.WorkDays)
.Inverse().KeyColumn("StoreID").ForeignKeyCascadeOnDelete()
.Cascade.All();
}
}
and this is for the WorkDayMap
public class WorkDayMap : ClassMap<WorkDay>{
public WorkDayMap() {
Id(x => x.WorkDayID)
.GeneratedBy.Identity();
Map(x => x.TimeOpen);
Map(x => x.TimeClose);
References(x => x.Store).Column("StoreID");
References(x => x.Day).Column("DayID");
}
}
NHibernate shouldn't insert the WorkDay first, so there must be an error in your code. Make sure you do all of the following:
Add all WorkDay objects to the WorkDays collection.
Set the Store property on all WorkDay objects to the parent object.
Call session.Save() for the Store but not for the WorkDay objects.
edit: You should also note that ForeignKeyCascadeOnDelete() won't change anything at runtime. This is just an attribute for the hbm2ddl tool. If you want NHibernate to delete removed entries, use Cascade.AllDeleteOrphan().
It probably inserts the Workday before the Store because the first has an identity generator. This forces NH to execute an INSERT statement to generate the ID. guid.comb is generated in memory, NH doesn't need the database.
NH tries to access the db at the latest possible point in time, to avoid unnecessary updates and to make use of batches. Workday is inserted when you call session.Save, Store is inserted when it flushes the session next time (eg. on commit).
You shouldn't use the identity generator (unless you are forced to use it). It is bad for performance anyway.
If it still doesn't work, you probably need to remove the not-null constraint on the foreign key. NH can't resolve it every time. There is some smart algorithm which is also able to cope with recursive references. But there are sometimes cases where it sets a foreign key to null and updates it later even if there would be a solution to avoid it.

NHibernate Issuing Unwanted Orphaning Statements

Imagine that I have a Parent/Child relationship managed by NHibernate.
I'm receiving a Parent object from an MVC postback that edits its properties; I want to save just the parent to the database without having to load the children from the database.
At the time of the save, Parent has a Children property that is null (because it hasn't been loaded; there are, however, valid Children in the database for that parent).
When I save a modified Parent (ID=100), NHibernate is issuing a "SET Child.ParentId = NULL WHERE Child.ParentId = 100" statement. I don't want this to happen because there could be valid children. I shouldn't have to load them from the database before the save just to prevent them from being orphaned.
The fluent mappings look like this (true entity names genericized for this post):
public ParentMapping()
{
Table("Parent");
Id(x => x.Id).Column("Id").GeneratedBy.Identity();
Map(x => x.ParentProperty1).Column("ParentProperty1").Not.Nullable();
HasMany(x => x.Children).Cascade.None();
}
public ChildMapping()
{
Table("Children");
Id(x => x.Id).Column("Id").GeneratedBy.Identity();
Map(x => x.ChildProperty1).Column("ChildProperty1").Not.Nullable();
References(x => x.Parent).Column("Parent_Id").Not.Nullable().Fetch.Select();
}
To summarize, I want to save an updated Parent instance that was retrieved from an earlier ISession (and passed to a browser and back through MVC model minding); its Children property is null, but in reality it's got plenty of children in the database. I don't want NHibernate to issue any modifying statements to the Children table at all.
I've experimented with Cascade.None() and LazyLoad() in the hopes that this nudges NHibernate to behave differently, but no luck.
Any insight would be appreciated. Thanks!
Jeff
You must specify Inverse() on the has many to tell nhibernate not to worry about this side of the collection

NHibernate CreateSqlQuery and object graph

Hello I'm a newbie to NHibernate. I'd like to make one sql query to the database using joins to my three tables.
I have an Application with many Roles with many Users. I'm trying to get NHibernate to properly form the object graph starting with the Application object. For example, if I have 10 application records, I want 10 application objects and then those objects have their roles which have their users. What I'm getting however resembles a Cartesian product in which I have as many Application objects as total User records.
I've looked into this quite a bit and am not sure if it is possible to form the application hierarchy correctly. I can only get the flattened objects to come back. It seems "maybe" possible as in my research I've read about "grouped joins" and "hierarchical output" with an upcoming LINQ to NHibernate release. Again though I'm a newbie.
[Update Based on Frans comment in Ayende's post here I'm guessing what I want to do is not possible http://ayende.com/Blog/archive/2008/12/01/solving-the-select-n1-problem.aspx ]
Thanks for you time in advance.
Session.CreateSQLQuery(#"SELECT a.ID,
a.InternalName,
r.ID,
r.ApplicationID,
r.Name,
u.UserID,
u.RoleID
FROM dbo.[Application] a JOIN dbo.[Roles] r ON a.ID = r.ApplicationID
JOIN dbo.[UserRoleXRef] u ON u.RoleID = r.ID")
.AddEntity("app", typeof(RightsBasedSecurityApplication))
.AddJoin("role", "app.Roles")
.AddJoin("user", "role.RightsUsers")
.List<RightsBasedSecurityApplication>().AsQueryable();
I just discovered batching. This should be good enough, albeit using a join would be better.
return Session
.CreateCriteria<RightsBasedSecurityApplication>()
.SetFetchMode("Roles", FetchMode.Select)
.List<RightsBasedSecurityApplication>().AsQueryable();
public class RightsBasedSecurityApplicationMapping: ClassMap<RightsBasedSecurityApplication>
{
public RightsBasedSecurityApplicationMapping()
{
Table("Application");
Id(x => x.ID, "ID");//.Column("ID");
Map(x => x.InternalName);
HasMany(x => x.Roles).BatchSize(10);
public class RoleMapping : ClassMap<Role>
{
public RoleMapping()
{
Table("Roles");
Id(x => x.ID, "ID");
References(x => x.Application, "ApplicationID").Not.LazyLoad();
Map(x => x.Name);
HasMany(x => x.RightsUsers).Table("UserRoleXRef").BatchSize(100);

NHibernate Table Update Event

I have this table mapping (details don't really matter I think):
WithTable("COPACKER_FACILITY");
Id(x => x.FacilityNumber, "FACILITY_NUM").GeneratedBy.Sequence("FACSEQ");
Map(x => x.FacilityName, "FACILITY_NAME").Not.Nullable().Trimmed();
Map(x => x.AddressLine1, "ADDR1").Not.Nullable().Trimmed();
...
WithTable("FACIL_OTH_AUDIT_INFO", m =>
{
m.WithKeyColumn("FACILITY_NUM");
m.Map(x => x.ProdnShiftsNum, "PRODN_SHIFTS_NUM").Not.Nullable();
m.Map(x => x.ProdnCapacity, "PRODN_CAPACITY").Not.Nullable();
m.Map(x => x.ProdnLinesNum, "PRODN_LINES_NUM").Not.Nullable();
m.Map(x => x.AuditScore, "AUDIT_SCORE");
m.References(x => x.FacilStatus, "STATUS_IND").Not.Nullable();
});
HasMany(x => x.ComplianceFlags)
.KeyColumnNames.Add("FACILITY_NUM")
.Inverse()
.Cascade.All();
...
The reason for the one to one table is for audit reasons. There's a FACIL_OTH_AUDIT_INFO_HIST table that should get a record for every insert and update in the main table.
My question: How can I know when an insert or update happens in that table so I know to insert an audit record?
Many thanks!
+1 to what kvalcanti said... here's another post that I think explains it a little better though (and shows you how to do it without XML configuration!). I'm doing what this guy is doing on my project and it's working really well.
http://www.codinginstinct.com/2008/04/nhibernate-20-events-and-listeners.html
Caveat: I'm not inserting new objects that need to be saved in this event in my project, which I assume will not be a problem, but I can't say for sure since I'm not doing exactly what you're doing.
I posted the final solution to this problem and thought I'd share
http://robtennyson.us/post/2009/08/23/NHibernate-Interceptors.aspx
You can use event listeners.
try http://nhibernate.info/doc/howto/various/creating-an-audit-log-using-nhibernate-events.html