I want to do exactly what this question asks: Cascade Saves with Fluent NHibernate AutoMapping
Using Fluent Nhibernate Mappings to turn on "cascade" globally once for all classes and relation types using one call rather than setting it for each mapping individually.
The answer to the earlier question looks great, but I'm afraid that the Fluent Nhibernate API altered its .WithConvention syntax last year and broke the answer... either that or I'm missing something.
I keep getting a bunch of name space not found errors relating to the IOneToOnePart, IManyToOnePart and all their variations:
"The type or namespace name 'IOneToOnePart' could not be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?)"
I've tried the official example dll's, the RTM dll's and the latest build and none of them seem to make VS 2008 see the required namespace.
The second problem is that I want to use the class with my AutoPersistenceModel but I'm not sure where to this line: .ConventionDiscovery.AddFromAssemblyOf() in my factory creation method.
private static ISessionFactory CreateSessionFactory()
{
return Fluently.Configure()
.Database(SQLiteConfiguration.Standard.UsingFile(DbFile))
.Mappings(m => m.AutoMappings
.Add(AutoMap.AssemblyOf<Shelf>(type => type.Namespace.EndsWith("Entities"))
.Override<Shelf>(map =>
{
map.HasManyToMany(x => x.Products).Cascade.All();
})
)
)//emd mappings
.ExposeConfiguration(BuildSchema)
.BuildSessionFactory();//finalizes the whole thing to send back.
}
Below is the class and using statements I'm trying
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.IO;
using FluentNHibernate.Conventions;
using FluentNHibernate.Cfg;
using FluentNHibernate.Cfg.Db;
using NHibernate;
using NHibernate.Cfg;
using NHibernate.Tool.hbm2ddl;
using FluentNHibernate.Mapping;
namespace TestCode
{
public class CascadeAll : IHasOneConvention, IHasManyConvention, IReferenceConvention
{
public bool Accept(IOneToOnePart target)
{
return true;
}
public void Apply(IOneToOnePart target)
{
target.Cascade.All();
}
public bool Accept(IOneToManyPart target)
{
return true;
}
public void Apply(IOneToManyPart target)
{
target.Cascade.All();
}
public bool Accept(IManyToOnePart target)
{
return true;
}
public void Apply(IManyToOnePart target)
{
target.Cascade.All();
}
}
}
Here's a full working example similar to the Getting Started guide https://github.com/jagregory/fluent-nhibernate/wiki/Getting-started
The signature for the conventions has changed. Are you not using something like ReSharper? That would point you to that conclusion.
You can read more about the new conventions on the wiki.
The easiest way I've found to do this for a whole project is to use DefaultCascade:
Go to "The Simplest Conventions" section on the wiki, for this, and a list of others.
Edit: Here's the list from the Wiki:
A word of warning - some of the method names in the Wiki may be wrong. I edited the Wiki with what I could verify (i.e. DefaultCascade and DefaultLazy), but can't vouch for the rest. But you should be able to figure out the proper names with Intellisense if the need arises.