Question

I have an entity with a ModifiedDateTime property which I want to be updated with the current datetime from the database instead of the "application" server executing the application.

Every time I want to update or add a person to my datebase on SQL Server 2008 I want to fill ModifiedDateTime filed. It's not like I can change update query as with data adapter command when I work with dataset and to define for my ModifiedDateTime filed to be GetDate(). I created stored function to return me a value of GetDate() method, but I have a problem to import procedure which returns values as int, string or no value at all, already just entity values as Person for example in my case. Why is that?

Anyway, it would be of great help if you can help me to retrieve the current DateTime from the database server.

Was it helpful?

Solution

Is there a reason you just can't push it down to your database? If you include DateTime.Now in your entity query, it will push it down (getdate) to the database.

Example linq to entities

 var dQuery = dbContext.CreateQuery<DateTime>("CurrentDateTime() ");
 DateTime dbDate = dQuery.AsEnumerable().First();

SQL Generated ..

SELECT GetDate() AS [C1] FROM  ( SELECT cast(1 as bit) AS X ) AS [SingleRowTable1]

Might be a better way to do it ?

OTHER TIPS

This is an update of @Nix response to EF4:

var dateQuery = dbContext.Database.SqlQuery<DateTime>("SELECT getdate()");
DateTime serverDate = dateQuery.AsEnumerable().First();

An update for .net core 2.0

var dual =  databaseContext
            .Set<Dual>()
            .FromSql("SELECT -1 AS Id, GETDATE() AS DateTime")
            .First();

The fake entity

public class Dual
{
    public int Id { get; set; }
    public DateTime DateTime { get; set; }
}

In VS 2008, if you add a function template to return a scalar, it does not add the code to make it easy to use. You need to access the function template directly -- I use the partial class to build the needed methods for ease of use. They fixed this in VS2010.

    public DateTime GetDateTime()
    {
        var returnValue = new DateTime();
        using (var connection = new EntityConnection(Connection.ConnectionString))
        {
            connection.Open();
            using (var command = connection.CreateCommand())
            {
                command.CommandText = "myStoredProc";
                command.CommandType = CommandType.StoredProcedure;
                try
                {
                    returnValue = Convert.ToDateTime(command.ExecuteScalar());
                }
                finally
                {
                    connection.Close();
                }
            }
        }
        return returnValue;
    }

More information: Function Imports in Entity Model with a non-Entity Return Type

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