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Home/ Questions/Q 920969
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T18:48:06+00:00 2026-05-15T18:48:06+00:00

Recently I’ve read article The Entity Framework In Layered Architecture and there is written

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Recently I’ve read article “The Entity Framework In Layered Architecture” and there is written we can send EF-entities to client through WCF. But in many threads on Stackoverflow people tell that POCO(DTO)-objects should be used when we use WCF.
And I have some questions.

  1. Why did Microsoft add DataContract attribute to EF-entities? Does Microsoft wanted us to use these objects everywhere in our applications? Or this is only for very simple applications and for rapid development?

  2. If I use POCO-objects, should I create auto generated EF-Entities, POCO-Entities and after that use any mapping library between them? Or I should use only POCO-objects in all components of my application?

  3. If I already have my own business entity, which has some methods, and it should be mapped to POCO object, on which layer should I convert POCO-object to my entity (for example, I have persistence layer, business logic layer, service layer(WCF), presenter layer (client, use WCF), UI layer)? Or I shouldn’t make such my own entities?

Thanks in advance

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T18:48:07+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 6:48 pm

    1.Why did Microsoft add DataContract
    attribute to EF-entities? Does
    Microsoft wanted us to use these
    objects everywhere in our
    applications? Or this is only for very
    simple applications and for rapid
    development?

    Generally speaking, it is a bad idea to expose your EF-Entities in the service layer because that hardly couples your service layer and model representation. so any changes done in the model ends affecting directly your services, not a good idea. also you will have to version your service layer in some moment, so avoid to expose the EF entities in your service layer.

    2.If I use POCO-objects, should I create auto generated EF-Entities,
    POCO-Entities and after that use any
    mapping library between them? Or I
    should use only POCO-objects in all
    components of my application?

    You can use POCO objects inside your service layer, to decouple it from any underlying layers (see Automapper, to cover the Entity-DTO mapping cost). but you could still use the autogenerated EF-entities among the data and business layers in your architecture. just try to not rely in EF specific features of your generated domain model in other layers different from data layer. to ease the migration to another ORM frameworks.

    If I already have my own business
    entity, which has some methods, and it
    should be mapped to POCO object, on
    which layer should I convert
    POCO-object to my entity (for example,
    I have persistence layer, business
    logic layer, service layer(WCF),
    presenter layer (client, use WCF), UI
    layer)? Or I shouldn’t make such my
    own entities?

    Service layer http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms978717.aspx. you would be using your domain model transparently among the server tier (persistence, business, service and presenter layers) of your application, and the only layer that will require you a DTO mapping is the service layer, see question 1. (additionally if you are using ViewModels inside your the presenter layer -nice idea- you will require to use POCOs-mapping in the presenter layer too).

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