Well i have been fighting with this for a little bit now, and i can't seem to find a solution for something it should be really simple. I got a class ( really simple class ) i got the hbm.xml ( SET AS EMBEDDED RESOURCE ) i got the config file set for SQLite but i still get the [Class] Is not mapped.Here is where the error comes up, when i run this:
Public Sub LoadCentersFromDatabase()
Try
Dim session As ISession = OpenSession()
Dim query As IQuery = session.CreateQuery("from Center")
I'm working on a project to replace ADO.NET data access logic using NHibernate where we're not able to map the entire domain model at once. This means we'll have domain classes with property mappings to other domain classes that aren't yet mapped with NHibernate.
Consider a Person class with an Address property (Address being a domain object without an NH mapping and Person being the class I'm mapping). How can I include Address in the Person mapping without creating an entire mapping for Address? Is it possible to call legacy (ADO.NET) data access logic from a custom PropertyAccessor? If so, is it reasonable?
*I asked this within another question here but didn't get a response. I'm hoping to get one in a more concise question.
Basically, I wish to fetch a filtered set of objects from the database (Oracle 9.2) based on the id property of the object PsalertsEvent. The code being executed is:
Public Overloads Function GetAll(ByVal laterThan As Long, ByVal filteredPsalertsEvents As IList) As IList Implements IPsalertsEventRepo.GetAll 'Get all psalerts events with an ID greater then the specified laterThan parameter filteredPsalertsEvents = MyBase.NHibernateSession.CreateQuery("from PsalertsEvent p where p.id > " & laterThan).List
I just read this article about the Entity Framework 4 (actually version 2).Entity Framework seems to offer a huge improvement over its first release. Thus, I have never ever used EF in any project, since I think EF is not mature enough in comparison to NHibernate.NHibernate and its current contributions of FluentNHibernate and Linq for NHibernate by Ayende RahienMy feeling is that Microsoft is solely trying to gain terrain it has lost in favor of NHibernate when the 2nd version of NHibernate came out.Nevertheless, my concerns are the followings (not in particular order):Will EF4 tend to be less XML-verbose?Will EF4 be compatible with other underlying datastore than just SQL Server?What are the greatest benefits of going with EF4 instead of FluentNHibernate or NHibernate itself.
NHibernate is a great tool, I guess everyone agrees. Due to its predecessor Hibernate, we may easily find documentions and tutorials and sample applications to get acquainted with it. This is not the case for FluentNHibernate. Particularly as per the project I'm working on right now which demands that I investigate further about NHibernate and its options (FluentNHibernate for instance) in order to document the rules of usage and the best practices of NHibernat and FluentNHibernate technology. Thus, being handcuffed with VB.NET, being a C-Style developer, I can't find some syntax equivalencies in VB.NET for the examples provided, though I made I way so far
I have a database table called Job. I have mapped this table using LINQ to SQL so that I have a class called Job.
What I want to do is add some methods to the Job class. The Job class is defined in the LINQ to SQL classes .dbml file. So, in order to add methods, or anything else to the Job class what should I do?
Should I create a partial class named Job and define the methods in there? Will that then get mixed in properly? Not sure how to proceed on this one.
I have a database table called Job. I have mapped this table using LINQ to SQL so that I have a class called Job.What I want to do is add some methods to the Job class. The Job class is defined in the LINQ to SQL classes .dbml file. So, in order to add methods, or anything else to the Job class what should I do?Should I create a partial class named Job and define the methods in there? Will that then get mixed in properly? Not sure how to proceed on this one.
I have a database table called Job. I have mapped this table using LINQ to SQL so that I have a class called Job.What I want to do is add some methods to the Job class. The Job class is defined in the LINQ to SQL classes .dbml file. So, in order to add methods, or anything else to the Job class what should I do?Should I create a partial class named Job and define the methods in there? Will that then get mixed in properly? Not sure how to proceed on this one.
I would like to ask if you can use VB.NET for NHibernate and Fluent Nhibernate?I have searched the web, but I can't seem to get a detailed or explicit statement that tells that one can use VB.NET for NHibernate and with Fluent.
Many of the samples in the NHibernate site are made in C#. That's why I was wondering if I can't use VB.NET when using NHibernate.
how to use nHibernate with Vb.net using all the examples online(which are in C#) to learn. Which has been fine for the basics, but now I'm trying to learn how to use QueryOver's JoinAlias, and going from C# to VB.net is difficult. I've been using this page's answer as a reference, but I'm still having trouble converting an example like that to Vb.net.
I'm struggling with getting Linq To NHibernate to work.I have referenced NHibernate, NHibernate.Linq and NHibernate.ByteCode.Castle . Also I have all other dependencies in the same folder.
Code / Error message:
Public Function GetProjectsByName(ByVal ProjectName As String) As List(Of Project) Return (From x In _session.Linq(Of Project)() Where x.Name.Equals(Project))
End Function[code]....
... tells me that the LINQ extensions aren't loaded. Using NHibernate.Linq seems to be made in a way that it's incredibly easy to use, hence there are no tutorials on how to set it up. (Or at least I couldn't find any).
I have a repository class that defines some basic Get/Save/Delete methods. Inside these, I use NHibernate to do the work on my business entities. For example:
[code]...
However, on my User class I have some properties and collections of other objects that ideally I'd like to be lazy loaded. But of course, the ISession is created and disposed within the repository, which I guess is why, outside of that, when I try to access those properties I get a "Could not initialize proxy - no Session" error.Is my only option then to disable lazy loading when using repositories? Or is it possible (or just foolish) to somehow get the session into scope in the business layer?I do like the repository model, and NHibernate is growing on me (after lots of initial frustration trying to make it work), so what's the best way you gurus have found of using them together?
I am having some redundant primary key issues.I have an Item which contains many reports. I have mapped them as shown below. I can do Session.QueryOver(Of Item).List and there are no extra columns generated. I can also do Session.QueryOver(Of Report).List and there are no extra columns generated.
However, once I try to traverse the relationship from Item to Reports, I get the SQL query shown below. Can anyone tell me why?
I am starting on the NHibernate world and i am experimenting with the NHibernate CookBook recipes, i am trying to set a base entity class for my entities and this is the C# code for this. I would like to know whats the VB.NET version so i can implement it in my sample project
I am getting an "ArgumentOutOfRangeException" on parameter index whenever I try to instantiate a session factory in nHibernate. The error comes from a procedure deep in the bowels of nHibernate. This is on a fresh project with a pretty simple three tier architecture. The data layer maps the nHibernate classes to simple interfaces which are implemented by the business layer.Currently there is only one interface set and mapping file being used by nHibernate. Hopefully my issue is easy to spot.
Here is the function where I build the sessionFactory.
Private Shared Function SessionFactory() As ISessionFactory If _sessionFactory Is Nothing Then Dim config As New NHibernate.Cfg.Configuration config.Configure()
[code]....
Edit2: When I remove the discriminator I no longer get this error. Am I not doing that right?
Edit 3: When I download the source code for nHibernate, build it on my own, link to it's debug output and run it, I get a completely different error about ProxyFactoryFactory not being configured.
Because there is so little information about VB.Net and (Fluent) NHibernate to be found, I decided to write this question to all other developers finding themselves looking for more information.On of the things i had to struggle with was how to Ignore properties in NHibernate.The reason i had to ignore properties was because we used a Webserivce which cannot serialize Interface classes (ILists). Which are used a lot with NHibernate.
I've been using c# for the past year and I enjoy the power you get with Fluent NHibernate. One question that I get from friends is "nice but how can vb.net programmers use this?"So for example- the below is a c# mapping class. How would someone do this with vb.net?
public class PostMap : ClassMap<post> { public PostMap() { Table("Posts");
What I am looking for is how to verify that the z drive is mapped, and if so then run the unmapping drive command.When I try to use a if wshNet. anything the stupid thing won't return a true or false value?I searched all through the net to find some sort of If drive mapped = true, however nothing comes up that I can implement.
I read about the UNC path, but that doesn't seem to be making much difference, it may be that I need a user name and password for the connection, can anyone demonstrate code that allows username and password entry so that a file can copy to and from a mapped network drive or the UNC is "\serverarchiveJune"
I am attempting to bind objects pulled from an NHibernate session to a DataGridView and am having problems.I have a single session in which I fetch all of my "look-up" items that are bound to a combobox column, and then I query for the objects themselves. omehow, this still results in proxy child objects on the main objects. I have even changed the mapping of the look-up items to eager fetch, but I still get proxies somehow.Here is how I am fetching the objects:
Dim _makes As IList(Of Make) = session.QueryOver(Of Make).List Dim _models As IList(Of Model) = session.QueryOver(Of Model).List Dim _cars as IList(of Car) = session.QueryOver(of Car).List
Question: I get an exception serializing this class to a nHibernate xml file ({"Could not determine type for: System.Drawing.Image, System.Drawing, for columns:NHibernate.Mapping.Column(Settings)"}).
using System; using System.Collections.Generic; using System.Text;
Instinctively, I would say that this is impossible, as NHibernate needs to know some mapping information on how to persist a given type. Thus, I encountered some situations in which I could use such a feature. For instance, through a named query or something like so. On the other hand, using a named query would require me to make an addition to the configuration file.
Let's suppose we have an application interacting with some underlying datastore. This datastore is configured through the NHibernate configuration file. Then, I wish to have NHibernate load only a subset of an entity properties, from another subsystem to which my application shouldn't need to interact much, so it is not worthy to define classes for this system, as I only need a fraction of this alien system's information, let's say three out of thirty-two data columns. For that matter, if I chose to load only those three columns let's say for performance concerns, I would then use an anonymous type, perform the required action onto this information, then persist it back to the datastore. Now, it wouldn't be of much interest to do so if I only had one entity to get loaded from the datastore, so let's say I have about 75,000 rows to load into my process. I then shall consider this subset option very seriously!
What strategy should you choose in such situation, if you needed to persist these changes to a subset only of this entity's properties?FYI: I am asking because I must write specific rules of usage with NHibernate, such rules that even a beginner developer would even be able to use it without knowing too much about NHibernate, but only following the rules and guidance of the technical documents I have to produce.
I am using Fluent NHibernate to map an Oracle database. It is a legacy database so I cant really change everything I want.There is a GUID field, but the keys are still composite (I will change this as soon as I can so that the keys are not composite, but I cant do it right now). The GUID is a VARCHAR2 field with this layout: 551608b1-275d-49f6-9561-44d01aacf23f. The GUID is not added by a sequence in Oracle, but inserted from code (C# or VB.net)[code]Is the problem that I dont use a sequence to generate my GUID? How can I overcome this?
I have a read-only mssql-view, and I want to map it to nhibernate (using hbm.xml files). The view is a select that joins two tables. For give an abstract-insight, the select is something like this:
SELECT A.Id As A_ID, B.Id As B_ID, A.AttributeA, B.AttributeB, FROM A INNER JOIN B ON A.Id = B.RootID
It's a one-to-many relationship between A and B (B entries are dependant/leafs of A entries).
I'm using nhibernate's hbm.xml files, and I can't make it to work. I'd gladly appreciate if someone can enlight me of the kind of XML that I have to use, I guess that as my view has no ID, I have to create a composite-nhibernate id (wich will be the ids os A and B together) but I couldn't make it to work. Also the view is READ ONLY so I think that should make the solution easier.
I'm writing a solution where the data entities are passed to clients using datasets through a WCF service, with nHibernate as ORM. My predecessor has written some translator classes, converting datasets to entities and vice versa. In most cases he's declared the return object as a parameter for the object.
For example:
Public Shared Function CreateEntity(ByVal ds As DataSetObject, ByVal entity As EntityObject) As EntityObject Dim row As ds.EntityObjectRow = ds.EntityObject(0) entity.Id = row.Id
[code]....
He's not with the company anymore, so I can't ask him why he's done it this way. Hence my question here. Is there some performance gain, or traceablity thing with nHibernate by using the first implementation rather than the latter?
i want to work with it in vb. 1st i want to check if port is already mapped or not, if not then map it and once done remove the mapping. The one way is using shell and pass command in it, but not sure how to get already map status and also wondering if there is any other method to get it done.n :)
I have an application that sends files to a Network drive that has been mapped as the "Z:" drive. When code first runs, it errors with "path cannot be found". Then if you open up MyComputer, and double click on the drive, windows asks you for UserName/Password. Once entered, if you run the code again, everything is fine.
So it looks like it cant find the drive b/c a username/password has not "unlocked" the drive yet.
How do I get vb to unlock the drive so I may transfer the file?
I found some stuff online but it seems like it self maps the drive. I'm just looking at applying the username/password to the mapped drive so I may copy.