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Silverlight 4 + RIA Services - Ready for Business: Exposing Data from Entity Framework

To continue our series I wanted to look next at how to expose your data from the server side of your application. 

The interesting data in your business applications come from a wide variety of data sources.  From a SQL Database, from Oracle DB, from Sql Azure, from Sharepoint, from a mainframe and you have likely already chosen a datamodel such as NHibernate, Linq2Sql, Entity Framework, Stored Proc, a service.   The goal of RIA Service in this release is to make it easy to work with data from any (or many) of the sources in a seamless way from a Silverlight application.  This walk through will use Entity Framework accessing the Sql Express database, but the basic concept applies to any data source. 

Add DishView.mdf to BusinessApplication1.Web\App_Data – Of course in a real world example, you’d just have a connection string to an existing database.

Then create an Entity Framework model on top of it. 

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As you can see, we have a very simple Entity set.. each Restaurant can have any number of Plates.

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Next, we need to write some business logic that controls and shapes how to data is seen by the Silverlight client.  To do that, we add a new DomainService.  A DomainService is simply a special kind of WCF service that makes it MUCH easier to query, update, secure and validate your data.    But if you are a WCF expert and know all the ins-and-outs of configuring a WCF service, you can certainly customize this service in exactly the same way to match your needs.   Of course, in the 90% case we hope you will not need to do that.

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Next we are given a chance to pre-populate the DomainService.

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In this case, we will expose Plate and Restaurant, but only Plate will be updatable.    We will also generate a metadata class for hanging validation attributes on so that you can regenerate the EF model without losing any customizations.    We get a starter DishViewDomainService class.  I have updated it in lines 8-9 with a bit of business logic.   Let’s walk through each line..

   1:     [EnableClientAccess]
  2:     public class DishViewDomainService : LinqToEntitiesDomainService<DishViewEntities>
  3:     {
  4: 
  5:         public IQueryable<Restaurant> GetRestaurants()
  6:         {
  7:             return this.ObjectContext.Restaurants
  8:                 .Where (r=>r.Region != "NC")
  9:                 .OrderBy(r=>r.ID);
 10:         }
 11: 

Line 1: This attribute marks the DomainService as accessible over http, without it, the service is only callable from in process. This is useful in the ASP.NET WebForms\Dynamic Data scenario. 
Line 2: We drive this class from the LinqToEntitiesDomainService this is a utility class that provides a few helpers for working with EF.    The real work is done by the DomainService base class, this is the class you derive from for POCO and other custom scenarios.
line 5: Notice we are returning a IQueryable of our DAL Restaurant type.  IQuerable is the interface LINQ is built on.  This enables query capablities from the client so you can do things like sorting, paging, filtering from the client and have it compose with your custom business logic and execute on the data tier..  This means no extra data is sucked into the mid-tier or the client, but you don’t have gunk up your business logic to deal with that. 
Line 8-9: we have some  business logic that weeds out any Restaurant in North Carolina and puts a default ordering on the results. You can of course imagine more interesting business logic.

Comments

  • Anonymous
    April 22, 2010
    Hello, Brad it seems, your pictures has incorrect links to big images (like file://localhost/C:/Users/brada/AppData/Local/Temp/WindowsLiveWriter1286139640/supfiles289814C/image[28].png)

  • Anonymous
    April 23, 2010
    Can you show an example where you would load Restaraunts with its associated People represent this relation in UI (in tree for example).  I does not seam to work for parent / child situations. Only parent object get loaded in treeview contro. And associated child entities are just missing on a client side even with this.ObjectContext.Restaurants.Include("People") specified. I can see children being loaded on server side but not being sent to the client

  • Anonymous
    April 25, 2010
    Hi Brad, it seems that RIA Domain Services have a big problem concerning the model relations. As Dmitriy said, relations are not being shown on the cilent side and the only workaround for this is declaring metadata but in the same domain service. This way, you cannot use different domain services for People and Restaurant entities.

  • Anonymous
    April 30, 2010
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    May 10, 2010
    Thanks for the article, but could you go the next step and show us how to access the data from code. I need to retrieve the data from the table and work with it before displaying, but no one has shown an example of how to retrieve the data from the domain Service. thanks, chuck