should I use Entity Framework instead of raw ADO.NET
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I am new to CSLA and Entity Framework. I am creating a new CSLA / Silverlight application that will replace a 12 year old Win32 C++ system. The old system uses a custom DCOM business object library and uses ODBC to get to SQL Server. The new system will not immediately replace the old system -- they must coexist against the same database for years to come.

At first I thought EF was the way to go since it is the latest and greatest. After making a small EF model and only 2 CSLA editable root objects (I will eventually have hundreds of objects as my DB has 800+ tables) I am seriously questioning the use of EF.

In the current system I have the need many times to do fine detail performance tuning of the queries which I can do because of 100% control of generated SQL. But it seems in EF that so much happens behind the scenes that I lose that control. Article like http://toomanylayers.blogspot.com/2009/01/entity-framework-and-linq-to-sql.html don't help my impression of EF.

People seem to like EF because of LINQ to EF but since my criteria is passed between client and server as criteria object it seems like I could build queries just as easily without LINQ. I understand in WCF RIA that there is query projection (or something like that) where I can do client side LINQ which does move to the server before translation into actual SQL so in that case I can see the benefit of EF, but not in CSLA.

If I use raw ADO.NET, will I regret my decision 5 years from now?

Has anyone else made this choice recently and which way did you go?

Peraza answered 23/5, 2010 at 13:33 Comment(1)
Great question... I was about to ask a very similar one. I've been wondering what the advantage of EF is over the speed and control of ADO.NET...Leban
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In your case, I would still choose EF over doing it all by hand.

Why? EF - especially in .NET 4 - has matured considerably. It will allow you to do most of your database operations a lot easier and with a lot less code than if you have to all hand-code your data access code.

And in cases where you do need the absolute maximum performance, you can always plug in stored procedures for insert, update, delete which EF4 will then use instead of the default behavior of creating the SQL statements on the fly.

EF4 has a much better stored proc integration, and this really opens up the best of both worlds:

  • use the high productivity of EF for the 80% cases where performance isn't paramount
  • fine tune and handcraft stored procs for the remaining 20% and plug them into EF4

See some resources:

Burford answered 23/5, 2010 at 21:26 Comment(0)
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You seem to have a mix of requirements and a mix of solutions.

I normally rate each requirement with an essential, nice to have, not essential. And then see what works.

I agree with what @marc_s has said, you can have the best of both worlds.

The only other thing I would say is that if this solution is to be around for the next 5 years, have you considered Unit Testing?

There's plenty of examples on how to set this up using EF. (I personally avoid ADO.Net just because the seperating of concerns is so complicated for Unit Tests.)

There is no easy solution. I would pick a feature in your project that would take you a day or so to do. Try the different methods (raw sql, EF, EF + Stored Procs) and see what works!

Cardoso answered 23/5, 2010 at 23:41 Comment(0)
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Take an objective look at CSLA - invoke the 'DataPortal' and check out the call stack.

Next, put those classes on a CI build server that stores runtime data and provides a scatter plot over a series of runs.

Next, look at the code that gets created. Ask yourself how you can use things like dependecy injection in light of classes that rely on static creators with protected/private constructors.

Next, take a look at how many responsibilities the 'CSLA' classes take on.

Finally ask yourself if creating objects with different constructors per environment make sense, and ask yourself how you will unit test those.

Franctireur answered 25/6, 2010 at 0:3 Comment(2)
You seem to dislike CSLA for some valid reasons and some not so valid in my case. What do you recommend for a bus obj framework that has: usability from Silverlight and .NET (WebForms, WinForms, WPF, custom SOA), server side and client side rules (user configurable and hard-coded), user configurable per property / per CRUD security control, user configurable per property default field values, and various n-tier deployments to work within different customer environments. I need all of this and more. I am building an app not a framework and don't want to reinvent anything. Suggestions? Thanks.Peraza
I'm not sure what you mean by 'dislike csla'. Code is code. I took your original question to be on both csla and EF, but the wording of your requirements show that you have already fit the problem to the csla vernacular.Franctireur

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