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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 10, 20262026-06-10T12:32:04+00:00 2026-06-10T12:32:04+00:00

I’m trying to test my code using EntityFramework code first. In order to make

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I’m trying to test my code using EntityFramework code first. In order to make it testable and to allow isolation testing, I created an interface which my DbContext implements. I’m not testing the DbContext class – I’m going to assume EF code works as expected.

Now, consider the following method:

public IEnumerable<User> GetOddId()
{
    return context_.Users.Where((u, i) => i % 2 == 1).AsEnumerable();
}

This method will pass with my mock FakeDbSet (because it would use the in-memory LINQ provider) whereas it would fail with an Exception when using the EF/LINQ to SQL drivers.

Would you leave it as it is and hope people know enough not to write such queries? Would you give up isolation testing and test on an actual db?

Would the LocalDb with DataMigrations (perhaps with appropriate seeds) help with testing on an actual db?

Please justify the answer(s).

TLDR: How to test EntityFramework code, considering the differences between in-memory LINQ and SQL LINQ?

Much later edit: I’ve since found a very good framework that does exactly what I need. I wrote a blog post about unit testing with Effort. Also please note all this might not be needed in the upcoming EF6, which promises a some unit testing features.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-10T12:32:06+00:00Added an answer on June 10, 2026 at 12:32 pm

    We use SQLite’s in-memory databases for this purpose. They are extremely quick to create, query and tear down and barely have any impact on overall test speed. Once you’ve set yourself up a test framework to create a database and inject data, tests are quick to write.

    Of course, SQLite is a much simpler database than most, so complex queries may fail to translate to its version of SQL, but for testing 90% of cases, it works well.

    Do these tests constitute integration tests? I don’t think so. They are still only testing one unit of your code, namely the bit that generates a LINQ query. You’re testing for two things: 1) that the query returns the correct data (but you could check this using an in-memory collection as you stated), and 2) that the query can be translated into valid SQL by Entity Framework. The only real way to test the latter is to fire the query at a real Entity Framework but with a stubbed database.

    Whilst you could argue that a true unit test should test just the output of your code (i.e. parse and check the expression tree that has been generated), as well as being harder to write, it doesn’t really prove anything. If, for example, you modify the code to generate an inner join instead of a subquery, would you want the test to break? Only if it returns different results, I would have thought.

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