For simplicity’s sake, let’s say I have a SQL Server CE table called Widgets:
create table [Widgets] (
[Id] int not null primary key,
[Created] datetime not null default getdate())
Inserting without specifying a value for the Created column works as expected:
insert into [Widgets] ([Id]) values (1)
After generating an Entity Framework model called Database, I write following code:
Database db = new Database();
db.Widgets.AddObject(new Widget { Id = 2 });
db.SaveChanges();
But it raises an exception: An overflow occurred while converting to datetime. I tracked this down to the fact that EF sees the Created column as a non-nullable DateTime, and so when a new Widget is constructed, its Created property is set to the default DateTime (0001-01-01 12:00:00), which is outside of the valid range for SQL Server CE.
So, how do I get the above sample of C# to work? I’d prefer not to change the database schema. And I know I could set the Created property to DateTime.Now in the Widget constructor, but it may take a few minutes from the time a Widget is constructed until its actually inserted into the database, which is that actual time I want to capture.
Update: I tried setting StoreGeneratedPattern to Identity and Computed, but it raises an exception: Server-generated keys and server-generated values are not supported by SQL Server Compact. Default values do work in SQL Server CE, so it must be a limitation of Entity Framework. (Apparently this is fixed in SQL Server CE 4.0.)
Looks like DanM’s related question link pointed me in the right direction toward change tracking. The following code will get pretty close to the behavior I’m looking for:
All of the
Widgets’Createdvalues will be set to the current date and time. The only other issues I see is that the value is set according to the client’s clock, not the server’s. And if you’re inserting many rows at once, the timestamps will be a little ahead of what they would be with a normal insert.The best solution would allow SQL Server to do what it’s configured to do—set the value of the column if not provided. C’est la vie.