I’m developing an iOS app using Core Data. And I have a Log entity with one-to-many relationships with Audio, Photo entities, and one-to-one relationship with Status entity. The log also has text, longitude, latitude properties. I can create the log, change its properties, add status entity, these changes would display right, until I quit the App. All the changes would disappear, and I was looking at the sqlite database, all these changes were never persisted in the database. In the database, the status object will just be created, but not linked to the log object.
But if I add an audio or photo object into the log.audioSet or log.photoSet, the changes I made to log, including the changes to text or status, will suddenly be saved into the database.
So it seems the changes are only maintained in the NSManagedObjectContext, until a related one_to_many entity is added and the [[LTLogStore sharedStore] saveChanges] will suddenly start to work.
I am using a singleton to manage the NSManagedObjectContext. Any ideas?
I would post some code if it’s relevant. Thanks.
UPDATE: I’m not sure these code is enough. But basically everything works, and displays, it just doesn’t save to the database. I’m using the mogenerator to set the text and latitude, but since everything is in the context. I am not sure this is the code you might need.
CODE:
@interface LTLogStore : NSObject{
}
+ (LTLogStore *)sharedStore;
- (void)removeItem:(Log *)p;
- (Log *)createItem;
- (BOOL)saveChanges;
@property(nonatomic, strong) NSFetchedResultsController *resultsController;
@property(nonatomic, strong) NSManagedObjectModel *model;
@property(nonatomic, strong) NSManagedObjectContext *context;
@end
@implementation LTLogStore
@synthesize resultsController;
@synthesize context, model;
+ (LTLogStore *)sharedStore
{
static LTLogStore *sharedStore = nil;
if(!sharedStore){
sharedStore = [[super allocWithZone:nil] init];
}
return sharedStore;
}
+ (id)allocWithZone:(NSZone *)zone
{
return [self sharedStore];
}
- (id)init
{
self = [super init];
if(self) {
model = [NSManagedObjectModel mergedModelFromBundles:nil];
NSPersistentStoreCoordinator *psc =
[[NSPersistentStoreCoordinator alloc] initWithManagedObjectModel:model];
// Where does the SQLite file go?
NSString *path = [self itemArchivePath];
NSURL *storeURL = [NSURL fileURLWithPath:path];
NSError *error = nil;
if (![psc addPersistentStoreWithType:NSSQLiteStoreType
configuration:nil
URL:storeURL
options:nil
error:&error]) {
[NSException raise:@"Open failed"
format:@"Reason: %@", [error localizedDescription]];
}
// Create the managed object context
context = [[NSManagedObjectContext alloc] init];
[context setPersistentStoreCoordinator:psc];
// The managed object context can manage undo, but we don't need it
[context setUndoManager:nil];
}
return self;
}
- (NSFetchedResultsController *)resultsController {
if (resultsController !=nil) {
return resultsController;
}
NSFetchRequest *request = [[NSFetchRequest alloc] init];
NSEntityDescription *e = [[model entitiesByName] objectForKey:@"Log"];
[request setEntity:e];
NSSortDescriptor *sd = [NSSortDescriptor
sortDescriptorWithKey:@"created_at"
ascending:NO];
[request setSortDescriptors:[NSArray arrayWithObject:sd]];
[request setReturnsObjectsAsFaults:NO];
NSFetchedResultsController *fetchedResultsController = [[NSFetchedResultsController alloc]
initWithFetchRequest:request
managedObjectContext:context
sectionNameKeyPath:nil cacheName:@"Root"];
NSError *error;
BOOL success = [fetchedResultsController performFetch:&error];
if (!success) {
//handle the error
}
return fetchedResultsController;
}
- (NSString *)itemArchivePath
{
NSArray *documentDirectories =
NSSearchPathForDirectoriesInDomains(NSDocumentDirectory,
NSUserDomainMask, YES);
// Get one and only document directory from that list
NSString *documentDirectory = [documentDirectories objectAtIndex:0];
NSString *storePath = [documentDirectory stringByAppendingPathComponent:@"store.data"];
return storePath;
}
- (BOOL)saveChanges
{
NSError *err = nil;
BOOL successful = [context save:&err];
NSLog(@"Saving changes to the database");
if (!successful) {
NSLog(@"Error saving: %@", [err localizedDescription]);
}
return successful;
}
- (void)removeItem:(Log *)l
{
[context deleteObject:l];
[self saveChanges];
}
- (Log *)createItem
{
Log *p = [NSEntityDescription insertNewObjectForEntityForName:@"Log"
inManagedObjectContext:context];
[self saveChanges];
return p;
}
@end
@interface Log : _Log {
}
//these two are some custom convenience methods for location attributes, but it does the work of setting the longitude and latitude value in the log object, but calling the [[LTLogStore sharedStore] saveChanges] still won't save it into the database.
-(CLLocation*)location;
-(void)setLocation:(CLLocation*)location;
//this all works
-(Audio*)newAudio;
-(Audio*)newAudioWithPath:(NSString*)audioPath;
//after calling this method, even the log.text changes will be saved to the database.
-(void)addAudioWithPath:(NSString*)audioPath;
-(void)removeAudio:(Audio*)audio;
@end
#import "Log.h"
#import "Audio.h"
#import "LTLogStore.h"
@implementation Log
-(CLLocation*)location{
if (!self.longitude || !self.latitude) {
return nil;
}
CLLocation *l = [[CLLocation alloc] initWithLatitude:[self.latitude doubleValue] longitude:[self.longitude doubleValue]];
return l;
}
-(void)setLocation:(CLLocation*)location{
if (location==nil) {
self.latitude = nil;
self.longitude = nil;
}
self.latitude = [NSNumber numberWithDouble: location.coordinate.latitude];
self.longitude = [NSNumber numberWithDouble:location.coordinate.longitude];
[[LTLogStore sharedStore] saveChanges];
}
-(Audio*)newAudio{
Audio *a = [Audio new];
a.log = self;
return a;
}
-(Audio*)newAudioWithPath:(NSString*)audioPath{
Audio *new = [self newAudio];
[new setKey:audioPath];
return new;
}
-(void)addAudioWithPath:(NSString*)audioPath{
Audio *new = [self newAudio];
[new setKey:audioPath];
[[LTLogStore sharedStore] saveChanges];
}
-(void)removeAudio:(Audio*)audio{
[self.audiosSet removeObject:audio];
[[[LTLogStore sharedStore] context] deleteObject:audio];
[[LTLogStore sharedStore] saveChanges];
}
@end
UPDATE:
Problem solved, see answer.
UPDATE QUESTION: Why is my overriding causing the problem? Can someone explain the cause behind the magic of Core Data or maybe KVO behind scene?
Problem solved, I overrode the willChangeValueForKey method in the Log class, which caused the problem, I thought the code is irrelevant. But it IS: