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EntityFramework - Entity proxy error

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I am working on a system using Entityframework and have been for over 12monts now, and the project has been going well, up until yesterday, where I have now got a strange error which I have no idea why it occurs. I am doing nothing different to what I have done before, but once I load the entity in question and try to access any child entities I get the following error:

The entity wrapper stored in the proxy does not reference the same proxy 

Can anyone shed any light on what this actually means and what would cause this?

Showing my code doesnt really help.

Here is a simplified version of the code:

var quote = new QuoteHelper().GetById(orderId); var updatedQuotes = new Provider().GetExportQuotes(quote.DeparturePoint.Id,quote.DestinationPoint); 

The error occurs when accessing DeparturePoint and DestinationPoint but Quote loads correctly, and all properties are loaded.

The entity Quote looks a little like this:

public class Quote : BaseQuote, ICloneable {      public Guid DeparturePointId { get; set; }      public virtual LocationPoint DeparturePoint{ get; set; }       public Guid DestinationPointId { get; set; }      public virtual LocationPoint DestinationPoint{ get; set; } } 
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JamesStuddart Avatar asked Sep 07 '12 09:09

JamesStuddart


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What is an entity proxy?

When creating instances of POCO entity types, Entity Framework often creates instances of a dynamically generated derived type that acts as a proxy for the entity. This proxy overrides some virtual properties of the entity to insert hooks for performing actions automatically when the property is accessed.

How do you change the state of entity using DbContext?

This can be achieved in several ways: setting the EntityState for the entity explicitly; using the DbContext. Update method (which is new in EF Core); using the DbContext. Attach method and then "walking the object graph" to set the state of individual properties within the graph explicitly.


1 Answers

This happened to me too when I tried to implement ICloneable on my entity and cloned it using MemberwiseClone. Worked great when I was using entities that I instantiated myself. However, when I used this to clone an entity that had been loaded using EF, I got this error whenever I tried to add it to a DbSet (or in various other parts).

After some digging, I found that when you clone an EF-loaded entity, you're cloning the proxy class as well. One of the things a proxy class carries around is a reference to the wrapper fo the given entity. Because a shallow copy only copies a reference to the wrapper, you suddenly have two entities that have the same wrapper instance.

At this point, EF thinks you've created or borrowed a different proxy class for your entity which it assumes is for purposes of mischief and blocks you.

Edit

Here's a snippet that I created to work around this problem. Note that this will do a fair job of copying just the EF properties, but it's not perfect. Note that you'll need to modify it if you have private fields that must be copied as well, but you get the idea.

    /// <summary>     /// Makes a shallow copy of an entity object. This works much like a MemberwiseClone     /// but directly instantiates a new object and copies only properties that work with     /// EF and don't have the NotMappedAttribute.     /// </summary>     /// <typeparam name="TEntity">The entity type.</typeparam>     /// <param name="source">The source entity.</param>     public static TEntity ShallowCopyEntity<TEntity>(TEntity source) where TEntity : class, new()     {          // Get properties from EF that are read/write and not marked witht he NotMappedAttribute         var sourceProperties = typeof(TEntity)                                 .GetProperties()                                 .Where(p => p.CanRead && p.CanWrite &&                                             p.GetCustomAttributes(typeof(System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations.NotMappedAttribute), true).Length == 0);         var newObj = new TEntity();          foreach (var property in sourceProperties)         {              // Copy value             property.SetValue(newObj, property.GetValue(source, null), null);          }          return newObj;      } 
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N Jones Avatar answered Oct 03 '22 19:10

N Jones