I want to change the names of the tables used by ASP.NET Identity 2.0. I've seen various similar questions but nothing that solves my problem. For instance this type of solution: http://www.goatly.net/customizing-table-names-for-identitydbcontextwithcustomuser-data-contexts seems to depend on Code First(?). At any rate implementing OnModelCreating does nothing for me. I've basically renamed the AspNetUsers and similar tables to my own names and want to be able to use these. I have an existing EF context (MyContext) that I want to use, so I modified it to derive from IdentityDbContext (editing the t4 template), and then in Startup.Auth I have:
UserManagerFactory = () =>
{
var context = new MyContext();
Database.SetInitializer<MyContext>(new IdentityDbInitializer());
var userStore = new UserStore<IdentityUser>(context){
DisposeContext = true
};
return new UserManager<IdentityUser>(userStore);
};
But the problem occurs when I try to log in that I get "cannot contact server". I imagine that is because my UserStore has no way of knowing which are the User tables on my context. I'd hoped this is what the OnModelCreating code would do, but I'm hazy on this. I imagine UserStore is still looking for an "AspNetUsers" table, though I don't know where these names come from. I'm also uneasy about modifying the t4 template for my context - is this the way I'm supposed to derive from IdentityDbContext?
Any help greatly appreciated.
Few steps to follow:
Microsoft.AspNet.Identity.EntityFramework
connection string
to your web.config/app.configNow you have to define your custom Database Context
:
public class MyContext : IdentityDbContext
{
public MyContext()
: base(<connection string name>)
{
}
protected override void OnModelCreating(DbModelBuilder modelBuilder)
{
base.OnModelCreating(modelBuilder);
modelBuilder.Entity<IdentityUser>()
.ToTable("Users");
modelBuilder.Entity<IdentityRole>()
.ToTable("Roles");
modelBuilder.Entity<IdentityUserRole>()
.ToTable("UserRoles");
modelBuilder.Entity<IdentityUserClaim>()
.ToTable("UserClaims");
modelBuilder.Entity<IdentityUserLogin>()
.ToTable("UserLogins");
}
}
As you can see I've used DbModelBuilder
to map all the entities to a new tables.
Enable-Migrations
It will create a folder Migrations
with the configuration file Configuration.cs
.
It should look something like this:
internal sealed class Configuration : DbMigrationsConfiguration<ConsoleApplication1.Models.MyContext>
{
public Configuration()
{
AutomaticMigrationsEnabled = false;
}
protected override void Seed(ConsoleApplication1.Models.MyContext context)
{
}
}
In the constructor change the property AutomaticMigrationsEnabled
to true
.
Update-Database
It should run the script to create the new tables.
You can customize your entities (and Ids) creating custom class for each interface defined.
public class MyUser : IdentityUser<string, MyUserLogin, MyUserRole, MyUserClaim>
{
}
Since you're using Owin you can define your UserStore:
public class MyUserStore: UserStore<MyUser, MyRole, string, MyUserLogin, MyUserRole, MyUserClaim>
{
public MyUserStore(MyContext context)
: base(context)
{
}
}
and your UserManager implementation:
public class ApplicationUserManager : UserManager<ASPNETIdentity2.Models.MyUser, string>
{
public ApplicationUserManager(IUserStore<ASPNETIdentity2.Models.MyUser, string> store)
: base(store)
{
}
public static ApplicationUserManager Create(IdentityFactoryOptions<ApplicationUserManager> options, IOwinContext context)
{
var manager = new ApplicationUserManager(new MyUserStore(context.Get<MyContext>()));
manager.UserValidator = new UserValidator<MyUser, string>(manager)
{
AllowOnlyAlphanumericUserNames = false,
RequireUniqueEmail = true
};
manager.PasswordValidator = new PasswordValidator()
{
RequiredLength = 5,
RequireNonLetterOrDigit = false, // true
// RequireDigit = true,
RequireLowercase = false,
RequireUppercase = false,
};
return (manager);
}
}
And your Owin.Startup
should look something like this:
public class Startup
{
public void Configuration(IAppBuilder app)
{
app.CreatePerOwinContext(MyContext.Create);
app.CreatePerOwinContext<ApplicationUserManager>(ApplicationUserManager.Create);
}
}
If you want to have a look at a custom implementation you can check my GitHub repository with a simple working solution on ASP.NET MVC.
UPDATE:
There's another project in that solution with a minimal setup; basically you only need to define your context (IdentityDbContext) if you only want to rename your tables.
The project can be found here.