Related
I make an outer join and executed successfully in the informix database but I get the following exception in my code:
DataTable dt = TeachingLoadDAL.GetCoursesWithEvalState(i, bat);
Failed to enable constraints. One or more rows contain values
violating non-null, unique, or foreign-key constraints.
I know the problem, but I don't know how to fix it.
The second table I make the outer join on contains a composite primary key which are null in the previous outer join query.
EDIT:
SELECT UNIQUE a.crs_e, a.crs_e || '/ ' || a.crst crs_name, b.period,
b.crscls, c.crsday, c.from_lect, c.to_lect,
c.to_lect - c.from_lect + 1 Subtraction, c.lect_kind, e.eval, e.batch_no,
e.crsnum, e.lect_code, e.prof_course
FROM rlm1course a, rfc14crsgrp b, ckj1table c, mnltablelectev d,
OUTER(cc1assiscrseval e)
WHERE a.crsnum = b.crsnum
AND b.crsnum = c.crsnum
AND b.crscls = c.crscls
AND b.batch_no = c.batch_no
AND c.serial_key = d.serial_key
AND c.crsnum = e.crsnum
AND c.batch_no = e.batch_no
AND d.lect_code= e.lect_code
AND d.lect_code = ....
AND b.batch_no = ....
The problem happens with the table cc1assiscrseval. The primary key is (batch_no, crsnum, lect_code).
How to fix this problem?
EDIT:
According to #PaulStock advice:
I do what he said, and i get:
? dt.GetErrors()[0] {System.Data.DataRow} HasErrors: true ItemArray:
{object[10]} RowError: "Column 'eval' does not allow DBNull.Value."
So I solve my problem by replacing e.eval to ,NVL (e.eval,'') eval.and this solves my problem.
Thanks a lot.
This problem is usually caused by one of the following
null values being returned for columns not set to AllowDBNull
duplicate rows being returned with the same primary key.
a mismatch in column definition (e.g. size of char fields) between the database and the dataset
Try running your query natively and look at the results, if the resultset is not too large. If you've eliminated null values, then my guess is that the primary key columns is being duplicated.
Or, to see the exact error, you can manually add a Try/Catch block to the generated code like so and then breaking when the exception is raised:
Then within the command window, call GetErrors method on the table getting the error.
For C#, the command would be ? dataTable.GetErrors()
For VB, the command is ? dataTable.GetErrors
This will show you all datarows which have an error. You can get then look at the RowError for each of these, which should tell you the column that's invalid along with the problem. So, to see the error of the first datarow in error the command is:
? dataTable.GetErrors(0).RowError
or in C# it would be ? dataTable.GetErrors()[0].RowError
You can disable the constraints on the dataset. It will allow you to identify bad data and help resolve the issue.
e.g.
dataset.TableA.Clear();
dataset.EnforceConstraints = false;
dataAdapter1.daTableA.Fill(dataset, TableA");
The fill method might be slightly different for you.
This will find all rows in the table that have errors, print out the row's primary key and the error that occurred on that row...
This is in C#, but converting it to VB should not be hard.
foreach (DataRow dr in dataTable)
{
if (dr.HasErrors)
{
Debug.Write("Row ");
foreach (DataColumn dc in dataTable.PKColumns)
Debug.Write(dc.ColumnName + ": '" + dr.ItemArray[dc.Ordinal] + "', ");
Debug.WriteLine(" has error: " + dr.RowError);
}
}
Oops - sorry PKColumns is something I added when I extended DataTable that tells me all the columns that make up the primary key of the DataTable. If you know the Primary Key columns in your datatable you can loop through them here. In my case, since all my datatables know their PK cols I can write debug for these errors automatically for all tables.
The output looks like this:
Row FIRST_NAME: 'HOMER', LAST_NAME: 'SIMPSON', MIDDLE_NAME: 'J', has error: Column 'HAIR_COLOR' does not allow DBNull.Value.
If you're confused about the PKColumns section above - this prints out column names and values, and is not necessary, but adds helpful troubleshooting info for identifying which column values may be causing the issue. Removing this section and keeping the rest will still print the SQLite error being generated, which will note the column that has the problem.
Ensure the fields named in the table adapter query match those in the query you have defined. The DAL does not seem to like mismatches. This will typically happen to your sprocs and queries after you add a new field to a table.
If you have changed the length of a varchar field in the database and the XML contained in the XSS file has not picked it up, find the field name and attribute definition in the XML and change it manually.
Remove primary keys from select lists in table adapters if they are not related to the data being returned.
Run your query in SQL Management Studio and ensure there are not duplicate records being returned. Duplicate records can generate duplicate primary keys which will cause this error.
SQL unions can spell trouble. I modified one table adapter by adding a ‘please select an employee’ record preceding the others. For the other fields I provided dummy data including, for example, strings of length one. The DAL inferred the schema from that initial record. Records following with strings of length 12 failed.
This worked for me, source: here
I had this error and it wasn't related with the DB constrains (at least in my case). I have an .xsd file with a GetRecord query that returns a group of records. One of the columns of that table was "nvarchar(512)" and in the middle of the project I needed to changed it to "nvarchar(MAX)".
Everything worked fine until the user entered more than 512 on that field and we begin to get the famous error message "Failed to enable constraints. One or more rows contain values violating non-null, unique, or foreign-key constraints."
Solution: Check all the MaxLength property of the columns in your DataTable.
The column that I changed from "nvarchar(512)" to "nvarchar(MAX)" still had the 512 value on the MaxLength property so I changed to "-1" and it works!!.
The problem is with the Data Access designer. In Visual Studio, When we pull a View from "Server Explorer" to the Designer window, it is adding either a Primary key on a column randomly or marking something to a NOT NULL though it is actually set to null. Though the actual View creation in the SQL db server, doesn't have any primary key defined or the NOT NULL defined, the VS designer is adding this Key/constraint.
You can see this in the designer - it is shown with a key icon on left of the column name.
Solution: Right click on the key icon and select 'Delete Key'. This should solve the problem. You can also right click on a column and select "Properties" to see the list of properties of a column in the VS Data access designer and change the values appropriately.
This error was also showing in my project. I tried all the proposed solutions posted here, but no luck at all because the problem had nothing to do with fields size, table key fields definition, constraints or the EnforceConstraints dataset variable.
In my case I also have a .xsd object which I put there during the project design time (the Data Access Layer). As you drag your database table objects into the Dataset visual item, it reads each table definition from the underlying database and copies the constraints into the Dataset object exactly as you defined them when you created the tables in your database (SQL Server 2008 R2 in my case). This means that every table column created with the constraint of "not null" or "foreign key" must also be present in the result of your SQL statement or stored procedure.
After I included all the key columns and the columns defined as "not null" into my queries the problem disappeared completely.
Mine started working when I set AllowDBNull to True on a date field on a data table in the xsd file.
It sounds like possibly one or more of the columns being selected with:
e.eval, e.batch_no, e.crsnum, e.lect_code, e.prof_course
has AllowDBNull set to False in your Dataset defintion.
It is not clear why running a SELECT statement should involve enabling constraints. I don't know C# or related technologies, but I do know Informix database. There is something odd going on with the system if your querying code is enabling (and presumably also disabling) constraints.
You should also avoid the old-fashioned, non-standard Informix OUTER join notation. Unless you are using an impossibly old version of Informix, you should be using the SQL-92 style of joins.
Your question seems to mention two outer joins, but you only show one in the example query. That, too, is a bit puzzling.
The joining conditions between 'e' and the rest of the tables is:
AND c.crsnum = e.crsnum
AND c.batch_no = e.batch_no
AND d.lect_code= e.lect_code
This is an unusual combination. Since we do not have the relevant subset of the schema with the relevant referential integrity constraints, it is hard to know whether this is correct or not, but it is a little unusual to join between 3 tables like that.
None of this is a definitive answer to you problem; however, it may provide some guidance.
Thank you for all the input made so far. I just wanna add on that while one may have successfully normalized DB, updated any schema changes to their application (e.g. to dataset) or so, there is also another cause: sql CARTESIAN product (when joining tables in queries).
The existence of a cartesian query result will cause duplicate records in the primary (or key first) table of two or more tables being joined.
Even if you specify a "Where" clause in the SQL, a Cartesian may still occur if JOIN with secondary table for example contains the unequal join (useful when to get data from 2 or more UNrelated tables):
FROM tbFirst INNER JOIN
tbSystem ON tbFirst.reference_str <> tbSystem.systemKey_str
Solution for this:
tables should be related.
Thanks. chagbert
I solved the same problem by changing this from false to true. in the end I went into the database and changed my bit field to allow null, and then refreshed my xsd, and refreshed my wsdl and reference.cs and now all is well.
this.columnAttachPDFToEmailFlag.AllowDBNull = true;
Short and easy Soloution:
Go to MSSQL Studio Sever ;
Run the query of the cause of this error : in my case i see that id value was null because i forget to set Identity specification increment by 1.
So entered 1 for the id field as its is autoincremane and modify dont allow NULLS in desing view
That was the error that caused my bindingsource and tabel adapter throwin error at this code:
this.exchangeCheckoutReportTableAdapter.Fill(this.sbmsDataSet.ExchangeCheckouReportTable);
DirectCast(dt.Rows(0),DataRow).RowError
This directly gives the error
If you are using visual studio dataset designer to get the data table, and it is throwing an error 'Failed to Enable constraints'. I've faced the same problem, try to preview the data from the dataset designer itself and match it with table inside your database.
The best way to solve this issue is to delete the table adapter and create a new one instead.
* Secondary way : *
If you don't need [id] to be as Primary key,
Remove its primary key attribute:
on your DataSet > TableAdapter > right click on [id] column > select Delete key ...
Problem will be fixed.
I also had this issue and it was resolved after modifying the *.xsd to reflect the revised size of the column changed in the underlying SQL server.
To fix this error, i took off the troubling table adapter from the Dataset designer, and saved the dataset, and then dragged a fresh copy of the table adapter from the server explorer and that fixed it
I resolved this problem by opening the .xsd file with an XML reader and deleting a constraint placed on one of my views. For whatever reason when I added the view to the data it added a primary key constraint to one of the columns when there shouldn't have been one.
The other way is to open the .xsd file normally, look at the table/view causing the issue and delete any keys (right click column, select delete key) that should not be there.
Just want to add another possible reason for the exception to those listed above (especially for people who like to define dataset schema manually):
when in your dataset you have two tables and there is a relationship (DataSet.Reletions.Add()) defined from first table's field (chfield) to the second table's field (pfield), there is like an implicit constraint is added to that field to be unique even though it may be not specified as such explicitly in your definition neither as unique nor as a primary key.
As a consequence, should you have rows with repetitive values in that parent field (pfield) you'll get this exception too.
In my case this error was provoked by a size of a string column. What was weird was when I executed the exact same query in different tool, repeated values nor null values weren't there.
Then I discovered that the size of a string column size was 50 so when I called the fill method the value was chopped, throwing this exception.
I click on the column and set in the properties the size to 200 and the error was gone.
Hope this help
I solved this problem by doing the "subselect" like it:
string newQuery = "select * from (" + query + ") as temp";
When do it on mysql, all collunms properties (unique, non-null ...) will be cleared.
using (var tbl = new DataTable())
using (var rdr = cmd.ExecuteReader())
{
tbl.BeginLoadData();
try
{
tbl.Load(rdr);
}
catch (ConstraintException ex)
{
rdr.Close();
tbl.Clear();
// clear constraints, source of exceptions
// note: column schema already loaded!
tbl.Constraints.Clear();
tbl.Load(cmd.ExecuteReader());
}
finally
{
tbl.EndLoadData();
}
}
I received the same error type and in my case it solved it by removing the select fields and replacing them with a *. No idea why it was happening. The query had no typos or anything fancy.
Not the best solution but nothing else worked and I was getting exhausted.
In my search for a clear answer I found this on this:
https://www.codeproject.com/questions/45516/failed-to-enable-constraints-one-or-more-rows-cont
Solution 8
This error was also showing in my project, using Visual Studio 2010. I tried other solutions posted in other blogs, but no luck at all because the problem had nothing to do with fields size, table key fields definition, constraints or the EnforceConstraints dataset variable.
In my case I have a .xsd object which I put there during the project design time (in the Data Access Layer). As you drag your database table objects into the Dataset visual item, it reads each table definition from the underlying database and copies the constraints into the Dataset object exactly as you defined them when you created the tables in your database (SQL Server 2008 R2 in my case). This means that every table column created with the constraint of "not null" or "foreign key" must also be present in the result of your SQL statement or stored procedure.
After I included all the constrained columns (not null, primary key, foreign key, etc) into my queries the problem disappeared completely.
Perhaps you don't need all the table columns to be present in the query/stored procedure result, but because the constraints are still applied the error is shown if some constrained column does not appear in the result.
Hope this helps someone else.
If you have failing DataSet (not DataTable):
if (dataSet.HasErrors)
foreach (DataTable table in dataSet.Tables)
if (table.HasErrors)
foreach (var row in table.GetErrors())
Debug.Write($"Error in DataTable {table.TableName}: {row.RowError}")
if _sample_DataSet was the name of dataset that encounter error while filling, you can put the fill dataset inside a Try Catch and then put following code in catch{} block then you are able to exactly find the erroneous column.
foreach (DataTable _dtable in _sample_DataSet.DataSet.Tables)
{
foreach (DataRow dr in _dtable.Rows)
{
if (dr.HasErrors)
{
if (dr.HasErrors)
{
Debug.Write("Row error="+dr.RowError);
}
}
}
I make an outer join and executed successfully in the informix database but I get the following exception in my code:
DataTable dt = TeachingLoadDAL.GetCoursesWithEvalState(i, bat);
Failed to enable constraints. One or more rows contain values
violating non-null, unique, or foreign-key constraints.
I know the problem, but I don't know how to fix it.
The second table I make the outer join on contains a composite primary key which are null in the previous outer join query.
EDIT:
SELECT UNIQUE a.crs_e, a.crs_e || '/ ' || a.crst crs_name, b.period,
b.crscls, c.crsday, c.from_lect, c.to_lect,
c.to_lect - c.from_lect + 1 Subtraction, c.lect_kind, e.eval, e.batch_no,
e.crsnum, e.lect_code, e.prof_course
FROM rlm1course a, rfc14crsgrp b, ckj1table c, mnltablelectev d,
OUTER(cc1assiscrseval e)
WHERE a.crsnum = b.crsnum
AND b.crsnum = c.crsnum
AND b.crscls = c.crscls
AND b.batch_no = c.batch_no
AND c.serial_key = d.serial_key
AND c.crsnum = e.crsnum
AND c.batch_no = e.batch_no
AND d.lect_code= e.lect_code
AND d.lect_code = ....
AND b.batch_no = ....
The problem happens with the table cc1assiscrseval. The primary key is (batch_no, crsnum, lect_code).
How to fix this problem?
EDIT:
According to #PaulStock advice:
I do what he said, and i get:
? dt.GetErrors()[0] {System.Data.DataRow} HasErrors: true ItemArray:
{object[10]} RowError: "Column 'eval' does not allow DBNull.Value."
So I solve my problem by replacing e.eval to ,NVL (e.eval,'') eval.and this solves my problem.
Thanks a lot.
This problem is usually caused by one of the following
null values being returned for columns not set to AllowDBNull
duplicate rows being returned with the same primary key.
a mismatch in column definition (e.g. size of char fields) between the database and the dataset
Try running your query natively and look at the results, if the resultset is not too large. If you've eliminated null values, then my guess is that the primary key columns is being duplicated.
Or, to see the exact error, you can manually add a Try/Catch block to the generated code like so and then breaking when the exception is raised:
Then within the command window, call GetErrors method on the table getting the error.
For C#, the command would be ? dataTable.GetErrors()
For VB, the command is ? dataTable.GetErrors
This will show you all datarows which have an error. You can get then look at the RowError for each of these, which should tell you the column that's invalid along with the problem. So, to see the error of the first datarow in error the command is:
? dataTable.GetErrors(0).RowError
or in C# it would be ? dataTable.GetErrors()[0].RowError
You can disable the constraints on the dataset. It will allow you to identify bad data and help resolve the issue.
e.g.
dataset.TableA.Clear();
dataset.EnforceConstraints = false;
dataAdapter1.daTableA.Fill(dataset, TableA");
The fill method might be slightly different for you.
This will find all rows in the table that have errors, print out the row's primary key and the error that occurred on that row...
This is in C#, but converting it to VB should not be hard.
foreach (DataRow dr in dataTable)
{
if (dr.HasErrors)
{
Debug.Write("Row ");
foreach (DataColumn dc in dataTable.PKColumns)
Debug.Write(dc.ColumnName + ": '" + dr.ItemArray[dc.Ordinal] + "', ");
Debug.WriteLine(" has error: " + dr.RowError);
}
}
Oops - sorry PKColumns is something I added when I extended DataTable that tells me all the columns that make up the primary key of the DataTable. If you know the Primary Key columns in your datatable you can loop through them here. In my case, since all my datatables know their PK cols I can write debug for these errors automatically for all tables.
The output looks like this:
Row FIRST_NAME: 'HOMER', LAST_NAME: 'SIMPSON', MIDDLE_NAME: 'J', has error: Column 'HAIR_COLOR' does not allow DBNull.Value.
If you're confused about the PKColumns section above - this prints out column names and values, and is not necessary, but adds helpful troubleshooting info for identifying which column values may be causing the issue. Removing this section and keeping the rest will still print the SQLite error being generated, which will note the column that has the problem.
Ensure the fields named in the table adapter query match those in the query you have defined. The DAL does not seem to like mismatches. This will typically happen to your sprocs and queries after you add a new field to a table.
If you have changed the length of a varchar field in the database and the XML contained in the XSS file has not picked it up, find the field name and attribute definition in the XML and change it manually.
Remove primary keys from select lists in table adapters if they are not related to the data being returned.
Run your query in SQL Management Studio and ensure there are not duplicate records being returned. Duplicate records can generate duplicate primary keys which will cause this error.
SQL unions can spell trouble. I modified one table adapter by adding a ‘please select an employee’ record preceding the others. For the other fields I provided dummy data including, for example, strings of length one. The DAL inferred the schema from that initial record. Records following with strings of length 12 failed.
This worked for me, source: here
I had this error and it wasn't related with the DB constrains (at least in my case). I have an .xsd file with a GetRecord query that returns a group of records. One of the columns of that table was "nvarchar(512)" and in the middle of the project I needed to changed it to "nvarchar(MAX)".
Everything worked fine until the user entered more than 512 on that field and we begin to get the famous error message "Failed to enable constraints. One or more rows contain values violating non-null, unique, or foreign-key constraints."
Solution: Check all the MaxLength property of the columns in your DataTable.
The column that I changed from "nvarchar(512)" to "nvarchar(MAX)" still had the 512 value on the MaxLength property so I changed to "-1" and it works!!.
The problem is with the Data Access designer. In Visual Studio, When we pull a View from "Server Explorer" to the Designer window, it is adding either a Primary key on a column randomly or marking something to a NOT NULL though it is actually set to null. Though the actual View creation in the SQL db server, doesn't have any primary key defined or the NOT NULL defined, the VS designer is adding this Key/constraint.
You can see this in the designer - it is shown with a key icon on left of the column name.
Solution: Right click on the key icon and select 'Delete Key'. This should solve the problem. You can also right click on a column and select "Properties" to see the list of properties of a column in the VS Data access designer and change the values appropriately.
This error was also showing in my project. I tried all the proposed solutions posted here, but no luck at all because the problem had nothing to do with fields size, table key fields definition, constraints or the EnforceConstraints dataset variable.
In my case I also have a .xsd object which I put there during the project design time (the Data Access Layer). As you drag your database table objects into the Dataset visual item, it reads each table definition from the underlying database and copies the constraints into the Dataset object exactly as you defined them when you created the tables in your database (SQL Server 2008 R2 in my case). This means that every table column created with the constraint of "not null" or "foreign key" must also be present in the result of your SQL statement or stored procedure.
After I included all the key columns and the columns defined as "not null" into my queries the problem disappeared completely.
Mine started working when I set AllowDBNull to True on a date field on a data table in the xsd file.
It sounds like possibly one or more of the columns being selected with:
e.eval, e.batch_no, e.crsnum, e.lect_code, e.prof_course
has AllowDBNull set to False in your Dataset defintion.
It is not clear why running a SELECT statement should involve enabling constraints. I don't know C# or related technologies, but I do know Informix database. There is something odd going on with the system if your querying code is enabling (and presumably also disabling) constraints.
You should also avoid the old-fashioned, non-standard Informix OUTER join notation. Unless you are using an impossibly old version of Informix, you should be using the SQL-92 style of joins.
Your question seems to mention two outer joins, but you only show one in the example query. That, too, is a bit puzzling.
The joining conditions between 'e' and the rest of the tables is:
AND c.crsnum = e.crsnum
AND c.batch_no = e.batch_no
AND d.lect_code= e.lect_code
This is an unusual combination. Since we do not have the relevant subset of the schema with the relevant referential integrity constraints, it is hard to know whether this is correct or not, but it is a little unusual to join between 3 tables like that.
None of this is a definitive answer to you problem; however, it may provide some guidance.
Thank you for all the input made so far. I just wanna add on that while one may have successfully normalized DB, updated any schema changes to their application (e.g. to dataset) or so, there is also another cause: sql CARTESIAN product (when joining tables in queries).
The existence of a cartesian query result will cause duplicate records in the primary (or key first) table of two or more tables being joined.
Even if you specify a "Where" clause in the SQL, a Cartesian may still occur if JOIN with secondary table for example contains the unequal join (useful when to get data from 2 or more UNrelated tables):
FROM tbFirst INNER JOIN
tbSystem ON tbFirst.reference_str <> tbSystem.systemKey_str
Solution for this:
tables should be related.
Thanks. chagbert
I solved the same problem by changing this from false to true. in the end I went into the database and changed my bit field to allow null, and then refreshed my xsd, and refreshed my wsdl and reference.cs and now all is well.
this.columnAttachPDFToEmailFlag.AllowDBNull = true;
Short and easy Soloution:
Go to MSSQL Studio Sever ;
Run the query of the cause of this error : in my case i see that id value was null because i forget to set Identity specification increment by 1.
So entered 1 for the id field as its is autoincremane and modify dont allow NULLS in desing view
That was the error that caused my bindingsource and tabel adapter throwin error at this code:
this.exchangeCheckoutReportTableAdapter.Fill(this.sbmsDataSet.ExchangeCheckouReportTable);
DirectCast(dt.Rows(0),DataRow).RowError
This directly gives the error
If you are using visual studio dataset designer to get the data table, and it is throwing an error 'Failed to Enable constraints'. I've faced the same problem, try to preview the data from the dataset designer itself and match it with table inside your database.
The best way to solve this issue is to delete the table adapter and create a new one instead.
* Secondary way : *
If you don't need [id] to be as Primary key,
Remove its primary key attribute:
on your DataSet > TableAdapter > right click on [id] column > select Delete key ...
Problem will be fixed.
I also had this issue and it was resolved after modifying the *.xsd to reflect the revised size of the column changed in the underlying SQL server.
To fix this error, i took off the troubling table adapter from the Dataset designer, and saved the dataset, and then dragged a fresh copy of the table adapter from the server explorer and that fixed it
I resolved this problem by opening the .xsd file with an XML reader and deleting a constraint placed on one of my views. For whatever reason when I added the view to the data it added a primary key constraint to one of the columns when there shouldn't have been one.
The other way is to open the .xsd file normally, look at the table/view causing the issue and delete any keys (right click column, select delete key) that should not be there.
Just want to add another possible reason for the exception to those listed above (especially for people who like to define dataset schema manually):
when in your dataset you have two tables and there is a relationship (DataSet.Reletions.Add()) defined from first table's field (chfield) to the second table's field (pfield), there is like an implicit constraint is added to that field to be unique even though it may be not specified as such explicitly in your definition neither as unique nor as a primary key.
As a consequence, should you have rows with repetitive values in that parent field (pfield) you'll get this exception too.
In my case this error was provoked by a size of a string column. What was weird was when I executed the exact same query in different tool, repeated values nor null values weren't there.
Then I discovered that the size of a string column size was 50 so when I called the fill method the value was chopped, throwing this exception.
I click on the column and set in the properties the size to 200 and the error was gone.
Hope this help
I solved this problem by doing the "subselect" like it:
string newQuery = "select * from (" + query + ") as temp";
When do it on mysql, all collunms properties (unique, non-null ...) will be cleared.
using (var tbl = new DataTable())
using (var rdr = cmd.ExecuteReader())
{
tbl.BeginLoadData();
try
{
tbl.Load(rdr);
}
catch (ConstraintException ex)
{
rdr.Close();
tbl.Clear();
// clear constraints, source of exceptions
// note: column schema already loaded!
tbl.Constraints.Clear();
tbl.Load(cmd.ExecuteReader());
}
finally
{
tbl.EndLoadData();
}
}
I received the same error type and in my case it solved it by removing the select fields and replacing them with a *. No idea why it was happening. The query had no typos or anything fancy.
Not the best solution but nothing else worked and I was getting exhausted.
In my search for a clear answer I found this on this:
https://www.codeproject.com/questions/45516/failed-to-enable-constraints-one-or-more-rows-cont
Solution 8
This error was also showing in my project, using Visual Studio 2010. I tried other solutions posted in other blogs, but no luck at all because the problem had nothing to do with fields size, table key fields definition, constraints or the EnforceConstraints dataset variable.
In my case I have a .xsd object which I put there during the project design time (in the Data Access Layer). As you drag your database table objects into the Dataset visual item, it reads each table definition from the underlying database and copies the constraints into the Dataset object exactly as you defined them when you created the tables in your database (SQL Server 2008 R2 in my case). This means that every table column created with the constraint of "not null" or "foreign key" must also be present in the result of your SQL statement or stored procedure.
After I included all the constrained columns (not null, primary key, foreign key, etc) into my queries the problem disappeared completely.
Perhaps you don't need all the table columns to be present in the query/stored procedure result, but because the constraints are still applied the error is shown if some constrained column does not appear in the result.
Hope this helps someone else.
If you have failing DataSet (not DataTable):
if (dataSet.HasErrors)
foreach (DataTable table in dataSet.Tables)
if (table.HasErrors)
foreach (var row in table.GetErrors())
Debug.Write($"Error in DataTable {table.TableName}: {row.RowError}")
if _sample_DataSet was the name of dataset that encounter error while filling, you can put the fill dataset inside a Try Catch and then put following code in catch{} block then you are able to exactly find the erroneous column.
foreach (DataTable _dtable in _sample_DataSet.DataSet.Tables)
{
foreach (DataRow dr in _dtable.Rows)
{
if (dr.HasErrors)
{
if (dr.HasErrors)
{
Debug.Write("Row error="+dr.RowError);
}
}
}
I have this simple code : (update value)
I'm trying to update column "c"
using (MaxEntities ctx = new MaxEntities())
{
aa orders = (from order in ctx.aa
select order).First();
orders.c = 22;
ctx.SaveChanges();
}
this is the table :
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[aa](
[a] [int] NULL,
[b] [int] NOT NULL,
[c] [int] NOT NULL
) ON [PRIMARY]
and values inside :
but i get an exception :
The property 'c' is part of the object's key information and cannot be modified.
I'm new to EF.
any help will be much appreciated.
The property 'c' is part of the object's key information and cannot be modified.
That's why you can't edit it. Maybe you need to add id column as a key with identity specified
As explained in another answer EF must uniquely identify every entity. If you don't have PK in the database, EF will infer some key. Key is considered as fixed so if EF inferred c as part of the key (and it did it because it uses all non-nullable non-binary columns) you cannot change its value. Moreover EF takes all tables without primary key as readonly so even if you remove c from the key in the designer and modify c value you will get another exception when you execute SaveChanges.
The reason for the second exception is in the way how EF describes model and the database. When EF inferred key, it did it only for description of your entities and for context's internal needs but not for description of the database. When EF tries to save changes it builds UPDATE statement from database description and without information about real database PK columns it will not be able to identify correct record for update (every update in EF can affect only single record - EF checks ROWCOUNT). This can be solved by cheating EF and updating its database description = by describing some column in the table description as primary key. This leads to multiple problems:
You must have some unique column in the database otherwise this method will not work.
You must edit EDMX manually (as XML) to add this change
You must not use default MS EDMX designer for updating your model from database because it will delete your change
Simple advice: Either use database tables with primary keys or don't use Entity framework.
Primary key missing here. Add primary key in table and it work.
I believe if there's no PK at all, EF uses all of the fields/columns as part of the key info.Here's a nice explanation: by #SteveWilkes of why. But what do your entities look like? The other possibility is that it doesn't have a property because the association is inside a different entity, if this is a foreign key.
EDIT
This got me thinking. There are just going to be situations where you have to work with legacy tables having no PK, even if you would never create such a thing. What about views? EF is a mapper - it has to uniquely identify that record so it infers and defines this key. Yes, you could use stored procedures, but could you also hack the XML and remove the keys from the table definition?
AND EDIT AGAIN
After posting this, I see #Ladislav Mrnka already said a similar idea (cheating EF and updating its database description), so it has been done (WARNING: Consume at your own risk - never tried). Quick google got me this blog with clear instructions:
Close the model designer in Visual Studio if it is still open and re-open the .edmx file in an XML editor
Find the edmx:StorageModels -> Schema -> Entity Container -> EntitySet element that refers to the table in question
On the EntitySet element, rename the store:Schema attribute to Schema
Remove the store:Name attribute altogether
Remove the opening and closing DefiningQuery tags and everything in between them
Save and close the .edmx file
But really, who doesn't like a PK? Can you not add an id?
For updating records, instead of querying the context and updating each record individually,
we currently use code that does DeleteAllOnSubmit on existing set of rows and InsertAllOnSubmit on new set of rows.
This worked fine for majority of our scenarios, as in if the same row (content) is being inserted/deleted, it gets removed even though we have an insert and a delete in the ChangeSet. Also, if the primary key is the same, and the records have different content, it converts it to a single update. The problem we have is the primary key’s match in a case insensitive manner, like say ‘abc’ and ‘Abc’, Linq thinks they are different keys and then tries to run the Insert first followed by the delete next which fails due to primary key violation, since for our database settings, both the primary keys are considered equal. Is there a way where we could make Linq use a case insensitive comparison, when it determines an update from the inserts and deletes in ChangeSet?
I am aware that the other way would be to query the database, and if the record is present, do a update instead of a insert and a delete. But we do have this logic for multiple objects and we would like to see if there are other options that work.
Thanks for the responses.
Let me try to explain the issue we have with a example.
Say we have two tables a Bank and a Branch where a Bank can have multiple Branches.
We are given a set of branches that need to set in the table. So the logic would be to delete all branches for that bank and set it to the set of branches we have.
The current code we have does something
DataContext dc = new DataContext();
var destBranches = dc.Branches.Where(b => b.BankID.Equals("123"));
dc.Users.DeleteAllOnSubmit(destBranches);
dc.Branches.InsertAllOnSubmit(branches);
If we went with the update route, for each branch, we have to see if it exists in dest, then modify its properties, if not insert it, and finally if any dest branch is not in the set of branches, delete it. We have lots of tables that this change needs to be made.
If you have SQL 2008 look into using the MERGE statement. It performs an update/insert in one shot. SQL 2008 s'procs also accept table-value parameters which would make this trivial.
You may also try Plinqo. It does all the batch update dirty work for you.
I'm trying to use SqlBulkCopy to insert new rows into my DB table by manually populating a DataTable w/in my application.
This works fine for all tables except the table that has a composite primary key made up of 3 columns. Whenever I try to SqlBulkCopy anything into this table, I get the following error:
Violation of PRIMARY KEY constraint 'PK_MYCOMPOSITEKEY'. Cannot insert duplicate key in object 'dbo.MyTable'.
The statement has been terminated.
Is this even possible?
I have tried setting up my DataTable's primary keys with the following:
dt.PrimaryKey = new[] {dt.Columns["PKcolumn1"], dt.Columns["PKcolumn2"], dt.Columns["PKcolumn3"]};
but again, no luck.
The problem you have is with the data.
In the input file there is either or both of
a row which has the same data in the e pk columns as you already have in the table
or
The file has at least two rows with the same values of the pk columns
Bulk insert to a staging table. Clean up any duplicate records. Then do an insert using straight SQL. When you write the insert code be sure to limit it to records in the staging table that are not in the prod table.
You should verify your bulk data for copies before you hit the DB, the problem could be there as well (not just clashing with an existing constraint, or record in DB). It does work and it is usually correct to report it.
Nonetheless, the entire show of DataSet or even DataReaders is a messy exercise in mappings, bad typeless design, plenty of unnecessary transformations, allocations, object[] based values, and the entire thing becomes order, type and string dependent mess (something only MS could design and keeps designing). Native OLEDB bulk interfaces on the other hand are much cleaner.