Procédure : utiliser EntityConnection avec un contexte d'objet (Entity Framework)
Cette rubrique fournit un exemple de spécification d'un EntityConnection existant en vue de son utilisation par le contexte de l'objet. Pour plus d'informations, voir Chaînes de connexion (Entity Framework).
L'exemple de cette rubrique est basé sur le Modèle de vente AdventureWorks Sales Model. Pour exécuter le code de cet exemple, vous devez déjà avoir ajouté le modèle de vente AdventureWorks Sales Model à votre projet et configuré ce dernier pour qu'il utilise Entity Framework. Pour ce faire, exécutez la procédure décrite dans Procédure : utiliser l'Assistant Entity Data Model (Entity Framework).
Exemple
Cet exemple crée un EntityConnection qui est passé au constructeur d'un ObjectContext long. La connexion est établie manuellement. EntityConnection et ObjectContext sont supprimés manuellement.
' Define the order ID for the order we want.
Dim orderId As Integer = 43680
' Create an EntityConnection.
Dim conn As New EntityConnection("name=AdventureWorksEntities")
' Create a long-running context with the connection.
Dim context As New AdventureWorksEntities(conn)
Try
' Explicitly open the connection.
If conn.State <> ConnectionState.Open Then
conn.Open()
End If
' Execute a query to return an order.
Dim order As SalesOrderHeader = context.SalesOrderHeaders.Where("it.SalesOrderID = @orderId", _
New ObjectParameter("orderId", orderId)).Execute(MergeOption.AppendOnly).First()
' Change the status of the order.
order.Status = 1
' You do not have to call the Load method to load the details for the order,
' because lazy loading is set to true
' by the constructor of the AdventureWorksEntities object.
' With lazy loading set to true the related objects are loaded when
' you access the navigation property. In this case SalesOrderDetails.
' Delete the first item in the order.
context.DeleteObject(order.SalesOrderDetails.First())
' Save changes.
If 0 < context.SaveChanges() Then
Console.WriteLine("Changes saved.")
End If
' Create a new SalesOrderDetail object.
' You can use the static CreateObjectName method (the Entity Framework
' adds this method to the generated entity types) instead of the new operator:
' SalesOrderDetail.CreateSalesOrderDetail(1, 0, 2, 750, 1, (decimal)2171.2942, 0, 0,
' Guid.NewGuid(), DateTime.Today));
Dim detail = New SalesOrderDetail With
{
.SalesOrderID = 0,
.SalesOrderDetailID = 0,
.OrderQty = 2,
.ProductID = 750,
.SpecialOfferID = 1,
.UnitPrice = CDec(2171.2942),
.UnitPriceDiscount = 0,
.LineTotal = 0,
.rowguid = Guid.NewGuid(),
.ModifiedDate = DateTime.Now
}
order.SalesOrderDetails.Add(detail)
' Save changes again.
If 0 < context.SaveChanges() Then
Console.WriteLine("Changes saved.")
End If
Catch ex As InvalidOperationException
Console.WriteLine(ex.ToString())
Finally
' Explicitly dispose of the context and the connection.
context.Dispose()
conn.Dispose()
// Define the order ID for the order we want.
int orderId = 43680;
// Create an EntityConnection.
EntityConnection conn =
new EntityConnection("name=AdventureWorksEntities");
// Create a long-running context with the connection.
AdventureWorksEntities context =
new AdventureWorksEntities(conn);
try
{
// Explicitly open the connection.
if (conn.State != ConnectionState.Open)
{
conn.Open();
}
// Execute a query to return an order.
SalesOrderHeader order =
context.SalesOrderHeaders.Where(
"it.SalesOrderID = @orderId", new ObjectParameter("orderId", orderId))
.Execute(MergeOption.AppendOnly).First();
// Change the status of the order.
order.Status = 1;
// You do not have to call the Load method to load the details for the order,
// because lazy loading is set to true
// by the constructor of the AdventureWorksEntities object.
// With lazy loading set to true the related objects are loaded when
// you access the navigation property. In this case SalesOrderDetails.
// Delete the first item in the order.
context.DeleteObject(order.SalesOrderDetails.First());
// Save changes.
if (0 < context.SaveChanges())
{
Console.WriteLine("Changes saved.");
}
// Create a new SalesOrderDetail object.
// You can use the static CreateObjectName method (the Entity Framework
// adds this method to the generated entity types) instead of the new operator:
// SalesOrderDetail.CreateSalesOrderDetail(1, 0, 2, 750, 1, (decimal)2171.2942, 0, 0,
// Guid.NewGuid(), DateTime.Today));
SalesOrderDetail detail = new SalesOrderDetail
{
SalesOrderID = 1,
SalesOrderDetailID = 0,
OrderQty = 2,
ProductID = 750,
SpecialOfferID = 1,
UnitPrice = (decimal)2171.2942,
UnitPriceDiscount = 0,
LineTotal = 0,
rowguid = Guid.NewGuid(),
ModifiedDate = DateTime.Now
};
order.SalesOrderDetails.Add(detail);
// Save changes again.
if (0 < context.SaveChanges())
{
Console.WriteLine("Changes saved.");
}
}
catch (InvalidOperationException ex)
{
Console.WriteLine(ex.ToString());
}
finally
{
// Explicitly dispose of the context and the connection.
context.Dispose();
conn.Dispose();
}
Voir aussi
Tâches
Procédure : gérer la connexion dans un contexte d'objet long (Entity Framework)
Procédure : ouvrir manuellement la connexion à partir du contexte de l'objet (Entity Framework)