How do I turn off change tracking at the DbContext level in EF 4.1 RC?

Mark Bell picture Mark Bell · Mar 31, 2011 · Viewed 10.1k times · Source

I've encountered what seems to be a common problem: I am updating values in my database, but EF is using its original in-memory copy of the object and these changed values are not reflected in the displayed data. I understand why this is, but I can't figure out a way around it.

The most common solution seems to be to set MergeOptions.NoTracking to turn off change tracking completely (or use the AsNoTracking() extension method when querying) and force a refresh every time the object is accessed, which is fine for my purposes.

I've got a generic base repository which my other repositories inherit from:

public abstract class RepositoryBase<T> where T : class
{
    private readonly IDbSet<T> _dbset;
    private readonly IUnitOfWork _unitOfWork;

    protected RepositoryBase(IUnitOfWork unitOfWork)
    {
        _unitOfWork = unitOfWork;
        _dbset = _unitOfWork.Database.Set<T>();
    }

    public virtual IQueryable<T> All()
    {
        return _dbset;
    }

    // Some other IQueryable methods here (Query, GetByProductCode etc)

    public virtual T Get(long id)
    {
        return _dbset.Find(id);
    }
}    

And a DbContext like this:

public class Db : DbContext
{
    private IDbSet<Product> _products;

    public IDbSet<Product> Products
    {
        get { return _products ?? (_products = DbSet<Product>()); }
    }

    public virtual IDbSet<T> DbSet<T>() where T : class
    {
        return Set<T>();
    }

    public virtual void Commit()
    {
        base.SaveChanges();
    }
}

If I change the All() method of my repository thus:

public virtual IQueryable<T> All()
{
    return _dbset.AsNoTracking();
}

I get the desired result - an update in the database is reflected when the page displaying the products is refreshed. However, I can't do this in the Get() method, as that extension method only works on an IQueryable.

Ideally I'd like to turn this off at the DbContext level as I will never need change tracking, but there doesn't seem to be an obvious way to do this, and there is pretty much zero documentation on the subject (unless someone can point me to some? Please!).

I tried adding a constructor to the DbContext with these configuration options disabled:

public Db()
{
    base.Configuration.ProxyCreationEnabled = false;
    base.Configuration.AutoDetectChangesEnabled = false;
}

But I must admit I'm only guessing as to what they really do (I only found them through looking at the source code), and they don't seem to have any effect anyway.

Any help would be greatly appreciated. If more info/code would help, please let me know.

Answer

Ladislav Mrnka picture Ladislav Mrnka · Mar 31, 2011

If you want to force context to get fresh data each time you don't want to use Find method. Find method always query internal storage first. Use this instead:

public virtual T Get(long id)
{
    return All().SingleOrDefault(e => e.Id == id);
}

But I don't understand what do you need this? What do you mean by:

an update in the database is reflected when the page displaying the products is refreshed

Context is unit of work. It should be used as unit of work - in web application or web service it means creating new context instance per request. In winforms / wpf application it means using context per logical block (per presenter etc). Because of that you should need this only in very specific scenarios but you want it globally. Your description seems like you are reusing context among requests which is completely bad solution. There are no performance costs in recreating context for each request.