Question

I have a small model created using code-first approach - a class City which contains only information about city name.

public class City
{
    public City()
    {
        Posts = new List<Post>();
    }

    public City(string cityName)
    {
        Name = cityName;
    }

    public virtual ICollection<Post> Posts { get; private set; }
    public int Id { get; set; }
    public string Name { get; private set; }
}

A Post class represents combination of zip code and city reference

public class Post
{
    public virtual City City { get; set; }        
    public int Id { get; set; }
    public string ZipCode { get; set; }        
}

both entities have their sets defined in context as their configurations

public DbSet<City> Cities { get; set; }
public DbSet<Post> Posts { get; set; }

modelBuilder.Configurations.Add(new CityMap());
modelBuilder.Configurations.Add(new PostMap());


public class CityMap : EntityTypeConfiguration<City>
{
    public CityMap()
    {
        // Primary Key
        HasKey(t => t.Id);

        // Properties
        // Table & Column Mappings
        ToTable("City");
        Property(t => t.Id).HasColumnName("Id");
        Property(t => t.Name).HasColumnName("Name");
    }
}

public class PostMap : EntityTypeConfiguration<Post>
{
    public PostMap()
    {
        // Primary Key
        HasKey(t => t.Id);

        // Properties
        // Table & Column Mappings
        ToTable("Post");
        Property(t => t.Id).HasColumnName("Id");            
        Property(t => t.ZipCode).HasColumnName("ZipCode");

        // Relationships
        HasRequired(t => t.City)
        .WithMany(t => t.Posts)
        .Map(map=>map.MapKey("CityId"));
    }
}

I've created class for manipulation with those objects with static methods which get or creates objects and return them to caller.

private static City GetCity(string cityName)
{
        City city;

        using (var db = new DbContext())
        {
            city = db.Cities.SingleOrDefault(c => c.Name == cityName);

            if (city == null)
            {
                city = new City(cityName);
                db.Cities.Add(city);
                db.SaveChanges();                    
            }
        }

        return city;
    }

    private static Post GetPost(string zipCode, string cityName)
    {
        Post post;

        City city = GetCity(cityName);

        using (var db = new DbContext())
        {      
            post = db.Posts.SingleOrDefault(p => p.City.Id == city.Id && p.ZipCode == zipCode);
            if (post == null)
            {
                post = new Post { City = city, ZipCode = zipCode };

                // State of city is unchanged
                db.Posts.Add(post);

                // State of city is Added
                db.SaveChanges();
            }
        }

        return post;
    }

Imagine, that I call method

GetPost("11000","Prague");

method GetCity is started and if not exists, method creates a city and then calls the SaveChanges() method.

If I set returned city entity to new Post instance, Entity Framework generates a second insert for the same city.

How can I avoid this behavior? I want to only insert new post entity with referenced city created or loaded in previous step.

Was it helpful?

Solution

You need to set the State of your city when you attach it to unchanged

context.Entry(city).State = EntityState.Unchanged;
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