How do I get fluent nhibernate to create a varbinary(max) field in sql server

情到浓时终转凉″ 提交于 2019-11-28 00:45:57

I'm not sure why your ActiveRecord example is not working, but there you might try setting the length of the column.

With Fluent NHibernate, you should be able to do

Map(x => x.FileData)
    .WithLengthOf(2147483647)

I was having a similar issue with SQL FileStream and Fluent NHibernate where my BLOB writes were truncating at 8000 bytes. The following syntax finally fixed the problem:

Map(x => x.Bytes)
  .CustomSqlType("VARBINARY (MAX) FILESTREAM")
  .Length(2147483647)
  .Not.Nullable();

In the mapping use:

Map(x => x.FileData).CustomSqlType("VARBINARY(MAX)");

You need an auto-mapping override:

public class MyFileMapOverride : IAutoMappingOverride<MyFile>
{
    public void Override( AutoMapping<MyFile> mapping )
    {
        mapping.Map( x => x.FileData ).Length( int.MaxValue );
    }
}

Since you're using Castle, you can tell it to wire up NHibernate with your mappings in your NHibernateInstaller:

public void Install( IWindsorContainer container, IConfigurationStore store )
{
    container.Register( Component.For<ISessionFactory>()
                                 .UsingFactoryMethod( k => BuildSessionFactory() )
                                 .Named( "MySessionFactory" ) );

    // Do other stuff...
}

private ISessionFactory BuildSessionFactory()
{
    var mappings = AutoMap.AssemblyOf<MyFile>()
                          .IgnoreBase( typeof(Entity) )
                          .UseOverridesFromAssemblyOf<MyFileMapOverride>();

    var configuration = ConfigurationUtility
        .CreateConfiguration<WebSessionContext, DefaultProxyFactoryFactory>(
            "MyDbConnection",
            ConfigurationUtility.ForMsSql,
            mappings,
            NHibernateConfiguration.GetConfigurationPath() );

    return configuration.BuildSessionFactory();
}

AFAIK, there is no such thing in Fluent NHibernate as "max", however, if you set the allowed length of a column to a real big value, it should work fine. You can check MSDN for what number max means for each datatype in SQL Server, although it may mean some very different number in others.

I used reflector and found this:

public MsSql2005Dialect()
{
    base.RegisterColumnType(DbType.String, 0x3fffffff, "NVARCHAR(MAX)");
    base.RegisterColumnType(DbType.AnsiString, 0x7fffffff, "VARCHAR(MAX)");
    base.RegisterColumnType(DbType.Binary, 0x7fffffff, "VARBINARY(MAX)");
}

So, it seems that NHibernate creates max by default? Still, Fluent doesn't. (Although I don't know why.)

With the Auto mapping feature, you can use conventions to achieve it.

Example:

var cfg = new Configuration();

var persistenceModel = new AutoPersistenceModel();
persistenceModel.Conventions.Add(
    new PropertyConvention(),
    new ReferenceConvention(),
    new HasManyConvention(),
    ConventionBuilder.Property.Always(delegate(IPropertyInstance instance)
    {
        if (instance.Property.PropertyType == typeof(string))
            instance.Length(16000);
        else if (instance.Property.PropertyType == typeof(byte[]))
            instance.Length(30000000);
    }));
persistenceModel.AddTypeSource(new AssemblyTypeSource(Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly()));
persistenceModel.Where(t => t.Namespace.EndsWith("Entities"));

cfg.AddAutoMappings(persistenceModel);
return cfg.BuildSessionFactory();

For me, this suffices, but you can always use larger numbers.

If you don't use automapping, Dan Fitch's solution is the way to go, I guess.

First off, I (annoyingly) put the map file into the core project rather than the data project.

I still couldn't get it to work with a map file, but i wrote an xml file instead, writing the file length in - thanks for that Dan

 <property name="FileName"/>
 <property name="FileType"/>
 <property name="VersionNo"/>
 <property name="FileLength"/>
 <property name="FileData" length="2147483647"/>
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