NHibernate: No persister for NHibernate.Criterion.SqlFunctionProjection - nhibernate

I am using NHibernate version 2.0.0.4000.
In one of my queries I wanted to make use of the sql function dateadd to add a number of days. This wasn't registered so I created my own dialect and registered the function as follows:
RegisterFunction("adddays",
new SQLFunctionTemplate(NHibernateUtil.DateTime,
"dateadd(dd, ?1, ?2)"));
The registration gets hit and seems to work fine. I use the function in a DetachedCriteria query as follows:
...
Restrictions.LtProperty("DateColumn1"
Projections.SqlFunction("adddays", NHibernateUtil.DateTime,
Projections.Constant(days),
Projections.Property("DateColumn2"))
...
The criteria is returned from a method and passed of to another query. Upon the execution of the final query I get the following exception:
NHibernate.MappingException was caught
Message="No persister for: NHibernate.Criterion.SqlFunctionProjection"
Source="NHibernate"
StackTrace:
at NHibernate.Impl.SessionFactoryImpl.GetEntityPersister(String entityName,
Boolean throwIfNotFound)
at NHibernate.Impl.SessionFactoryImpl.GetEntityPersister(String entityName)
...
None of the blog posts that I have seen mention this problem. Can anybody help?
Cheers in advance.
Nige.

Solved it.
The problem was caused by my usage elsewhere of Restrictions.Eq rather than Restrictions.EqProperty. The former does not have an overload for (IProjection,IProjection) and so was treating the second projection as an object and passing it to a persister.
Thanks to anyone who investigated this.
Nigel.

For No Persister exception in nhibernet solution is
just give a right click on the respective hbm file ->Properties->change the type Build Action-> to Embedded Resource
with the above step application will working fine

Related

Underlying provided failed to open ? mvc4 , wcf

This code section i am getting error any ideas ?
public IEnumerable<LOBinfo> getLobinfo()
{
// var obj = from n in lobj.LOBinfoes select n;
return lobj.LOBinfoes.Select(m=>m).ToList();
// return obj.ToList();
}
I am not even using USING keyword ?
This issue been for a while and i referred many articles in stackoverflow itself but things looking bad for me .
Thank you for your suggestions
Underlying provider failed to open means, that at some point a database could not be reached, due to wrong connection settings for example or a previous failure etc...
The code you show here is allright, except for the fact you write a useless .Select you can drop the .Select(m=>m) and just leave the .ToList there.
Further, to find out what is causing your crash post the exact error message as well as the inner exception. (and the inner exception's inner exception and so on...)
Next to that the part "lobj.LOBinfoes" is probably a repository or something? You might as well post the code of that and the code of your data access object as well.

How can you use SessionAsSigner in a Java Bean called from an XPage?

According to Phillip Riand (see: discussion on openNTF) this is not possible... They need to know the design element to find out who signed it. Therefore, it is only available in SSJS.
There are 2 ways that I know of to use the sessionAsSigner object in Java beans:
1 By resolving the sessionAsSigner object:
FacesContext context = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance();
Session sessionAsSigner = context.getApplication().getVariableResolver().
resolveVariable(context, "sessionAsSigner");
2 By using the getCurrentSessionAsSigner() function from the com.ibm.xsp.extlib.util.ExtLibUtil class in the Extension Library.
To be able to use it (in Java as wel as SSJS) you'll want to make sure that all design elements were signed by the same user ID. If that's not the case, the sessionAsSigner object will not be available ('undefined').
I found that the solution is right at hand :-)
I changed my XPage (in this example an XAgent) to:
<xp:view xmlns:xp="http://www.ibm.com/xsp/core" rendered="false">
This is an xAgent returning json data...
<xp:this.afterRenderResponse><![CDATA[#{javascript:Controller.verify(sessionAsSigner)}]]></xp:this.afterRenderResponse>
and in the bean I simply used the session in the argument when I needed to open a database/document as signer. Sometimes the solution is so simple :-)
/John
This is quite an old post that I just stumbled upon. Tried some of the solutions mentioned above:
resolveVariable did not work for me, at least not for sessionAsSigner as this throws a runtime error (I can resolve plain old session, though...)
to be honest I didn't quite understand the Controller.verify(sessionAsSigner) method; is Controller something specific to XAgents? If so, I don't have an XAgent here, so can't use it
didn't feel like importing extra ExtLib classes here...
So I came up with another solution that appears to be very simple:
created a method in my javaBean that takes a session object as argument; since sessionAsSigner belongs to the same class as session I don't have to import something new.
Javacode is:
public void testSession(Session s) throws Exception{
System.out.println(" > test effective user for this session = "
+ s.getEffectiveUserName());
}
This is called from SSJS as either
mybean.testSession(session);
or
myBean.testSession(sessionAsSigner);
Maybe helps others, too

How do I utilize a named instance within the ObjectFactory.Initialize call for StructureMap?

I am trying to do the following bootstrapping:
x.For(Of IErrorLogger).Use(Of ErrorLogger.SQLErrorLogger)().
Ctor(Of IErrorLogger)("backupErrorLogger").Is(ObjectFactory.GetNamedInstance(Of IErrorLogger)("Disk"))
x.For(Of IErrorLogger).Add(
Function()
Return New ErrorLogger.DiskErrorLogger(
CreateErrorFileName(ServerMapPath(GetAppSetting("ErrorLogFolder"))))
End Function).Named("Disk")
But it shows this error:
StructureMap Exception Code: 200
Could not find an Instance named "Disk" for PluginType Logging.IErrorLogger
I sort of understand why this is happening.. the question is, how do I utilize a named instance within the registry? Maybe something like lazy initialization for the ctor argument for the SQLErrorLogger? I am not sure how to make it happen.
Thanks in advance for any help you can provide.
I found the correct way to do it in the latest version (2.6.1) of StructureMap:
x.For(Of IErrorLogger).Use(Of ErrorLogger.SQLErrorLogger)().
Ctor(Of IErrorLogger)("backupErrorLogger").Is(
Function(c) c.ConstructedBy(Function() ObjectFactory.GetNamedInstance(Of IErrorLogger)("Disk"))
)
x.For(Of IErrorLogger).Add(Function() _
New ErrorLogger.DiskErrorLogger(
CreateErrorFileName(ServerMapPath(GetAppSetting("ErrorLogFolder"))))
).Named("Disk")
Notice for the Is method of Ctor, we need to provide a func(IContext), and use the IContext.ConstructedBy(Func()) to call ObjectFactory.Get... to successfully register the IErrorLogger in this case.
This is the only way to do it as far as I know. The other Icontext methods such as IsThis and Instance will only work with already registered type.
Your problem is that you are trying to access the Container before it's configured. In order to make structuremap evaluate the object resolution after the configuration you need to provide a lambda to the Is function. The lambda will be evaluated when trying to resolve the type registered.
x.[For](Of ILogger)().Add(Of SqlLogger)().Ctor(Of ILogger)("backupErrorLogger")_
.[Is](Function(context) context.GetInstance(Of ILogger)("Disk"))
x.[For](Of ILogger)().Add(Of DiskLogger)().Ctor(Of String)("errorFileName")_
.[Is](CreateErrorFileName(ServerMapPath(GetAppSetting("ErrorLogFolder"))))_
.Named("Disk")
Disclaimer: I'm not completely up-to-date with the lambda syntax in VB.NET, but I hope I got it right.
Edit:
The working C# version of this I tried myself before posting was this:
ObjectFactory.Initialize(i =>
{
i.For<ILogger>().Add<SqlLogger>()
.Ctor<ILogger>("backup").Is(
c => c.GetInstance<ILogger>("disk"))
.Named("sql");
i.For<ILogger>().Add<DiskLogger>().Named("disk");
});
var logger = ObjectFactory.GetNamedInstance<ILogger>("sql");

Determine request Uri from WCF Data Services LINQ query for FirstOrDefault against Azure without executing it?

Problem
I would like to trace the Uri that will be generated by a LINQ query executed against a Microsoft.WindowsAzure.StorageClient.TableServiceContext object. TableServiceContext just extends System.Data.Services.Client.DataServiceContext with a couple of properties.
The issue I am having is that the query executes fine against our Azure Table Storage instance when we run the web role on a dev machine in debug mode (we are connecting to Azure storage in the cloud not using Dev Storage). I can get the resulting query Uri using Fiddler or just hovering over the statement in the debugger.
However, when we deploy the web role to Azure the query fails against the exact same Azure Table Storage source with a ResourceNotFound DataServiceClientException. We have had ResoureNotFound errors before that dealt with the behavior of FirstOrDefault() on empty tables. This is not the problem here.
As one approach to the problem, I wanted to compare the query Uri that is being generated when the web role is deployed versus when it is running on a dev machine.
Question
Does anyone know a way to get the query Uri for the query that will be sent when the FirstOrDefault() method is called. I know that you can call ToString() on the IQueryable returned from the TableServiceContext but my concern is that when FirstOrDefault() is called the Uri might be further optimized and ToString() on IQueryable might not be what is ultimately sent to the server when FirstOrDefault() is called.
If someone has another approach to the problem I am open to suggestions. It seems to be a general problem with LINQ when trying to determine what will happen when the expression tree is finally evaluated. I am open to suggestions here as well because my LINQ skills could use some improvement.
Sample Code
public void AddSomething(string ProjectID, string Username) {
TableServiceContext context = new TableServiceContext();
var qry = context.Somethings.Where(m => m.RowKey == Username
&& m.PartitionKey == ProjectID);
System.Diagnostics.Trace.TraceInformation(qry.ToString());
// ^ Here I would like to trace the Uri that will be generated
// and sent to the server when the qry.FirstOrDefault() call below is executed.
if (qry.FirstOrDefault() == null) {
// ^ This statement generates an error when the web role is running
// in the fabric
...
}
}
Edit Update and Answer
Steve provided the write answer. Our problem was as exactly described in this post which describes an issue with PartitionKey/RowKey ordering in Single Entity query which was fixed with an update to the Azure OS. This explains the discrepancy between our dev machines and when the web role was deployed to Azure.
When I indicated we had dealt with the ResourceNotFound issue before in our existence checks, we had dealt with it in two ways in our code. One way was using exception handling to deal with the ResourceNotFound error the other way was to put the RowKey first in the LINQ query (as some MS people had indicated was appropriate).
It turns out we have several places where the RowKey was first instead of using the exception handling. We will address this by refactoring our code to target .NET 4 and using the .IgnoreResourceNotFoundException = true property of theTableServiceContext .
Lesson learned (more than once): Don't depend on quirky undocumented behavior.
Aside
We were able to get the query Uri's. They did turn out to be different (as indicated they would be in the blog post). Here are the results:
Query Uri from Dev Fabric
`https://ourproject.table.core.windows.net/Somethings()?$filter=(RowKey eq 'test19#gmail.com') and (PartitionKey eq '41e0c1ae-e74d-458e-8a93-d2972d9ea53c')
Query Uri from Azure Fabric
`https://ourproject.table.core.windows.net/Somethings(RowKey='test19#gmail.com',PartitionKey='41e0c1ae-e74d-458e-8a93-d2972d9ea53c')
I can do one better... I think I know what the problem is. :)
See http://blogs.msdn.com/b/windowsazurestorage/archive/2010/07/26/how-wcf-data-service-changes-in-os-1-4-affects-windows-azure-table-clients.aspx.
Specifically, it used to be the case (in previous Guest OS builds) that if you wrote the query as you did (with the RowKey predicate before the PartitionKey predicate), it resulted in a filter query (while the reverse, PartitionKey preceding RowKey) resulted in the kind of query that raises an exception if the result set is empty.
I think the right fix for you (as indicated in the above blog post) is to set the IgnoreResourceNotFoundException to true on your context.

Private property mapping with fluent nhibernate

I am getting exception mapping a private property.This is the situation:
I have this in Entity.cs:
privat int m_Inactive;
and in EntityMap.cs I have :
Map(x => Reveal.Property<Entity>("m_Inactive")).ColumnName.("INACTIVE");
But I get this error:
System.Reflection.TargetInvocationException: Exception has been thrown
by
the target of an invocation. ---> System.ArgumentException: Not a member access
What could be the reason?
Thanks.
If you follow the examples on the wiki you'll see that you're supposed to use Map(Reveal.Member<YourEntity>("m_Inactive")).
Looks like in the latest version you're supposed to use Reveal.Member since Reveal.Property is obsolete:
Map(Reveal.Member<YourEntity>("m_Inactive"))
Oh, and sort of a "duh" but you'll need to make sure you include FluentNHibernate:
using FluentNHibernate;
And another "duh" but this will work with protected members as well as private.