Reputation: 11895
Can SimpleMembership be used with EF model-first? When I try it, I get "Unable to find the requested .NET Framework Data Provider" when I call WebSecurity.InitializeDatabaseConnection.
To put it another way: I can't get the call to WebSecurity.InitializeDatabaseConnection
to work when the connection string employs the System.Data.EntityClient
provider (as it does when using the model-first paradigm).
To repro the issue, create an MVC 4 app, and replace the code-first UserProfile entity class (which you get for free with the MVC 4 template) with a model-first User class that you have created in the Entity Designer:
User
to the model, with fields for Id,
UserName, and FullName
. So, at this point, the User
data entity is
mapped to a Users
table and is accessed via a funky connection
string that employs the System.Data.EntityClient
provider.User
entity. One easy way to do
that is to scaffold out a Users controller based on the User table
and its associated DbContext.AccountModels.cs
file to remove the UserProfile
class and
its associated UsersContext
class. Replace the references to the
(now missing) UserProfile
and UsersContext
classes with references
to your new User class and its associated DbContext
class.InitializeSimpleMembershipAttribute
class and the references to it.When you run the repro, it will get an Exception at the call to InitializeDatabaseConnection.
Bob
Upvotes: 24
Views: 21497
Reputation: 7262
this problem caused by WebSecurity.InitializeDatabaseConnection
can't use connection string with System.Data.EntityClient
provider name.
providing dual connection string isn't sound good, so you can generate the connection string for EF model first in the constructor in the partial class.
the code is look like bellow
public partial class MyDataContext
{
private static string GenerateConnectionString(string connectionString)
{
var cs = System.Configuration.ConfigurationManager
.ConnectionStrings[connectionString];
SqlConnectionStringBuilder sb =
new SqlConnectionStringBuilder(cs.ConnectionString);
EntityConnectionStringBuilder builder =
new EntityConnectionStringBuilder();
builder.Provider = cs.ProviderName;
builder.ProviderConnectionString = sb.ConnectionString;
builder.Metadata = "res://*/MyDataContext.csdl|" +
"res://*/MyDataContext.ssdl|res://*/MyDataContext.msl";
return builder.ToString();
}
public MyDataContext(string connectionName) :
base(GenerateConnectionString(connectionName)) { }
}
with this trick you can use single connection string on your web config, but one problem you can't use default constructor on your datacontext, instead you should seed connection string name everywhere when you instantiate the datacontext. but it is not a big problem when you use dependency injection pattern.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 3121
1 - You need to enable migrations, prefereably with EntityFramework 5
2 - Move your
WebSecurity.InitializeDatabaseConnection("DefaultConnection", "UserProfile", "UserId", "EmailAddress", autoCreateTables: true);
to your Seed method in your YourMvcApp/Migrations/Configuration.cs class
protected override void Seed(UsersContext context)
{
WebSecurity.InitializeDatabaseConnection(
"DefaultConnection",
"UserProfile",
"UserId",
"UserName", autoCreateTables: true);
if (!Roles.RoleExists("Administrator"))
Roles.CreateRole("Administrator");
if (!WebSecurity.UserExists("lelong37"))
WebSecurity.CreateUserAndAccount(
"lelong37",
"password",
new {Mobile = "+19725000000", IsSmsVerified = false});
if (!Roles.GetRolesForUser("lelong37").Contains("Administrator"))
Roles.AddUsersToRoles(new[] {"lelong37"}, new[] {"Administrator"});
}
Now EF5 will be in charge of creating your UserProfile table, after doing so you will call the WebSecurity.InitializeDatabaseConnection to only register SimpleMembershipProvider with the already created UserProfile table (In your case, you can replace the "UserProfile" parameter value with your custom table name), also tellling SimpleMembershipProvider which column is the UserId and UserName. I am also showing an example of how you can add Users, Roles and associating the two in your Seed method with custom UserProfile properties/fields e.g. a user's Mobile (number).
3 - Now when you run update-database from Package Manager Console, EF5 will provision your table with all your custom properties
For additional references please refer to this article with sourcecode: http://blog.longle.net/2012/09/25/seeding-users-and-roles-with-mvc4-simplemembershipprovider-simpleroleprovider-ef5-codefirst-and-custom-user-properties/
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 507
SimpleMembership can work with model first. Here is the solution.
1.InitializeSimpleMembershipAttribute.cs
from MVC 4 Internet Application templete should look like this
namespace WebAndAPILayer.Filters
{
[AttributeUsage(AttributeTargets.Class | AttributeTargets.Method, AllowMultiple = false, Inherited = true)]
public sealed class InitializeSimpleMembershipAttribute : ActionFilterAttribute
{
private static SimpleMembershipInitializer _initializer;
private static object _initializerLock = new object();
private static bool _isInitialized;
public override void OnActionExecuting(ActionExecutingContext filterContext)
{
// Ensure ASP.NET Simple Membership is initialized only once per app start
LazyInitializer.EnsureInitialized(ref _initializer, ref _isInitialized, ref _initializerLock);
}
private class SimpleMembershipInitializer
{
public SimpleMembershipInitializer()
{
try
{
WebSecurity.InitializeDatabaseConnection("ConnStringForWebSecurity", "UserProfile", "Id", "UserName", autoCreateTables: true);
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
throw new InvalidOperationException("Something is wrong", ex);
}
}
}
}
}
2.Delete CodeFirst Classes from AcountModel.cs
3.Fix AccountCotroler.cs
to work with your Model-first DbContext (ExternalLoginConfirmation(RegisterExternalLoginModel model, string returnUrl)
method)
4.Define your "ConnStringForWebSecurity"
connection string which is not same as that funky conn string for model-first db access, notice that we use provider System.Data.SqlClient
not System.Data.EntityClient
<connectionStrings>
<add name="ModelFirstEntityFramework" connectionString="metadata=res://*/Context.csdl|res://*/Context.ssdl|res://*/Context.msl;provider=System.Data.SqlClient;provider
connection string="data source=.\SQLEXPRESS;Initial
Catalog=aspnet-MVC4;Integrated
Security=SSPI;multipleactiveresultsets=True;App=EntityFramework""
providerName="System.Data.EntityClient" />
<add name="ConnStringForWebSecurity" connectionString="data source=.\SQLEXPRESS;Initial Catalog=aspnet-MVC4;Integrated
Security=SSPI" providerName="System.Data.SqlClient" />
</connectionStrings>
Upvotes: 24
Reputation: 159
I´m not able to work with EF and WebMatrix webSecurity class so to avoid this problem and go ahead:
Change my Ef model first to code first.
Change the connection string to use providerName="System.Data.SqlClient"(removing all the metadata information) or use the EF connection
In my case the model, data and web are different proyects so for me is not an issue to remove this information from the web.config on the web.project.
Nowadays websecuroty.initializedatabase dosen't run with EF connection string.
I wish this helps
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 126547
That's a bug in MVC 4. There's a workaround in this blog post.
As an action filter,
InitializeSimpleMembershipAttribute
hooks intoOnActionExecuting
to perform the lazy initialization work, but this can be too late in the life cycle. The Authorize attribute will need the providers to be ready earlier if it needs to perform role based access checks (duringOnAuthorization
). In other words, if the first request to a site hits a controller action like the following:
[Authorize(Roles="Sales")]
.. then you’ll have an exception as the filter checks the user’s role but the providers aren’t initialized.
My recommendation is to remove ISMA from the project, and initialize WebSecurity during the application start event.
Upvotes: 12