I'm having issue in Insertion of data in Temporal table
using C# Entity Framework
The Table schema is
CREATE TABLE People(
PeopleID int PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL,
Name varchar(50) Null,
LastName varchar(100) NULL,
NickName varchar(25),
StartTime datetime2 GENERATED ALWAYS AS ROW START NOT NULL,
EndTime datetime2 GENERATED ALWAYS AS ROW END NOT NULL,
PERIOD FOR SYSTEM_TIME (StartTime,EndTime)
) WITH (SYSTEM_VERSIONING = ON(HISTORY_TABLE = dbo.PeopleHistory));
I created an EDMX asusal and I tried to Insert a record using following C# Code
using (var db = new DevDBEntities()) {
People1 peo = new People1() {
PeopleID = 1,
Name = "Emma",
LastName = "Watson",
NickName = "ICE"
};
db.Peoples.Add(peo);
db.SaveChanges();
}
I got an exception while on db.SaveChanges()
"Cannot insert an explicit value into a GENERATED ALWAYS column in
table 'DevDB.dbo.People'. Use INSERT with a column list to exclude the
GENERATED ALWAYS column, or insert a DEFAULT into GENERATED ALWAYS
column."
I tried direct insertion using SQL Server using the following Insert Query, its inserting fine.
INSERT INTO [dbo].[People]
([PeopleID]
,[Name]
,[LastName]
,[NickName])
VALUES
(2
,'John'
,'Math'
,'COOL')
Kindly assist me how to insert an record using C# Entity Framework.
Light summary: The problem occurs when EF trying to update values inside PERIOD
system versioning column which the column property values are managed by SQL Server itself.
From MS Docs: Temporal tables, the temporal table works as a pair of current table and history table which explained as this:
System-versioning for a table is implemented as a pair of tables, a
current table and a history table. Within each of these tables, the
following two additional datetime2 columns are used to define the
period of validity for each row:
Period start column: The system records the start time for the row in this column, typically denoted as the SysStartTime column.
Period end column: The system records the end time for the row in this column, typically denoted at the SysEndTime column.
As both StartTime
& EndTime
column are automatically generated, they must be excluded from any attempt to insert or update values on them. Here are these steps to get rid of the error, assuming you're in EF 6:
- Open EDMX file in designer mode, set both
StartTime
& EndTime
column properties as Identity
in StoreGeneratedPattern
option. This prevents EF refreshing values on any UPDATE
events.
Create a custom command tree interceptor class which implements System.Data.Entity.Infrastructure.Interception.IDbCommandTreeInterceptor
and specify set clauses which should be set as ReadOnlyCollection<T>
(T is a DbModificationClause
) which cannot be modified by EF in insert or update modifications:
internal class TemporalTableCommandTreeInterceptor : IDbCommandTreeInterceptor
{
private static ReadOnlyCollection<DbModificationClause> GenerateSetClauses(IList<DbModificationClause> modificationClauses)
{
var props = new List<DbModificationClause>(modificationClauses);
props = props.Where(_ => !_ignoredColumns.Contains((((_ as DbSetClause)?.Property as DbPropertyExpression)?.Property as EdmProperty)?.Name)).ToList();
var newSetClauses = new ReadOnlyCollection<DbModificationClause>(props);
return newSetClauses;
}
}
Still in the same class above, create list of ignored table names and define actions in INSERT and UPDATE commands, the method should be looks like this (credits to Matt Ruwe for this method):
// from /a/40742144
private static readonly List<string> _ignoredColumns = new List<string> { "StartTime", "EndTime" };
public void TreeCreated(DbCommandTreeInterceptionContext interceptionContext)
{
if (interceptionContext.OriginalResult.DataSpace == DataSpace.SSpace)
{
var insertCommand = interceptionContext.Result as DbInsertCommandTree;
if (insertCommand != null)
{
var newSetClauses = GenerateSetClauses(insertCommand.SetClauses);
var newCommand = new DbInsertCommandTree(
insertCommand.MetadataWorkspace,
insertCommand.DataSpace,
insertCommand.Target,
newSetClauses,
insertCommand.Returning);
interceptionContext.Result = newCommand;
}
var updateCommand = interceptionContext.Result as DbUpdateCommandTree;
if (updateCommand != null)
{
var newSetClauses = GenerateSetClauses(updateCommand.SetClauses);
var newCommand = new DbUpdateCommandTree(
updateCommand.MetadataWorkspace,
updateCommand.DataSpace,
updateCommand.Target,
updateCommand.Predicate,
newSetClauses,
updateCommand.Returning);
interceptionContext.Result = newCommand;
}
}
}
Register the interceptor class above before database context usage in another code part either by using DbInterception
:
DbInterception.Add(new TemporalTableCommandTreeInterceptor());
or attach it in context definition using DbConfigurationTypeAttribute
:
public class CustomDbConfiguration : DbConfiguration
{
public CustomDbConfiguration()
{
this.AddInterceptor(new TemporalTableCommandTreeInterceptor());
}
}
// from /a/40302086
[DbConfigurationType(typeof(CustomDbConfiguration))]
public partial class DataContext : System.Data.Entity.DbContext
{
public DataContext(string nameOrConnectionString) : base(nameOrConnectionString)
{
// other stuff or leave this blank
}
}
Related issues:
Entity Framework not working with temporal table
Getting DbContext from implementation of IDbCommandInterceptor
Hooking IDbInterceptor to EntityFramework DbContext only once
Probably the simplest solution would be manually edit the .EDMX file and remove all traces of the StartTime and EndTime columns.