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linq - How to implement Unit of Work that works with EF and NHibernate

I was working on a Unit of Work implementation that works both in Entity Framework 4.1 and NHibernate. Find below the skeleton of my implementation details

IUnitOfWork definition

public interface IUnitOfWork
{
    IRepository<LogInfo> LogInfos { get; }
    IRepository<AppInfo> AppInfos { get; }
    void Commit();
    void Rollback();
}

IRepository definition

public interface IRepository<T> where T : class, IEntity
{
    IQueryable<T> FindAll();
    IQueryable<T> FindWhere(Expression<Func<T, bool>> predicate);
    T FindById(int id);
    void Add(T newEntity);
    void Remove(T entity);
}

Implementation of UoW in NHibernate

public class NHibernateUnitOfWork : IUnitOfWork, IDisposable
{
    public ISession Session { get; private set; }

    public NHibernateUnitOfWork(ISessionFactory sessionFactory)
    {
        _sessionFactory = sessionFactory;
        Session = _sessionFactory.OpenSession();
        _transaction = Session.BeginTransaction();
    }

    public IRepository<LogInfo> LogInfos
    {
        get
        {
            if (_logInfo == null)
            {
                _logInfo = new NHibernateRepository<LogInfo>(Session);
            }

            return _logInfo;
        }
    }

    public void Commit()
    {
        if (_transaction.IsActive)
            _transaction.Commit();
    }
}

Unit of Work in Entity Framework 4.1

public class SqlUnitOfWork : IUnitOfWork
{
    private readonly ObjectContext _context;

    public SqlUnitOfWork()
    {
        _context = new ObjectContext(connectionString);
        _context.ContextOptions.LazyLoadingEnabled = true;
    }

    private SqlRepository<LogInfo> _logInfo = null;

    public IRepository<LogInfo> LogInfos
    {
        get
        {
            if (_logInfo == null)
            {
                _logInfo = new SqlRepository<LogInfo>(_context);
            }
            return _logInfo;
        }
    }

    public void Commit()
    {
        _context.SaveChanges();
    }
}

Repository using NHibernate

public class NHibernateRepository<T> : IRepository<T> where T : class, IEntity
{
    protected ISession Session;

    public NHibernateRepository(ISession session)
    {
        Session = session;
    }

    public IQueryable<T> FindAll()
    {
        return Session.Query<T>();
    }

    public IQueryable<T> FindWhere(Expression<Func<T, bool>> predicate)
    {
        return Session.Query<T>().Where<T>(predicate);
    }

    public T FindById(int id)
    {
        return Session.Get<T>(id);
    }

    public void Add(T newEntity)
    {
        Session.Save(newEntity);
    }

    public void Remove(T entity)
    {
        Session.Delete(entity);
    }
}

Repository using Entity Framework

public class SqlRepository<T> : IRepository<T> where T : class, IEntity
{
    protected ObjectSet<T> ObjectSet;

    public SqlRepository(ObjectContext context)
    {
        ObjectSet = context.CreateObjectSet<T>();
    }

    public IQueryable<T> FindAll()
    {
        return ObjectSet;
    }

    public IQueryable<T> FindWhere(Expression<Func<T, bool>> predicate)
    {
        return ObjectSet.Where(predicate);
    }

    public T FindById(int id)
    {
        return ObjectSet.Single(i => i.Id == id);
    }

    public void Add(T newEntity)
    {
        ObjectSet.AddObject(newEntity);
    }

    public void Remove(T entity)
    {
        ObjectSet.DeleteObject(entity);
    }
}

With this implementation I could get most of the features like saving, deleting, transaction working on both EF and NH. But when I start writing complex LINQ queries against Repositories NH fails most of the time. Some features like OrderBy and ToList throws errors when Repository is returning NhQueryable.

In the following code is called from ASP.NET MVC controller to which I'm injecting instance of IUnitOfWork using StructureMap. When NHibernateUnitOfWork is injected Where condition does not get applied where as it works as expected when SqlUnitOfWork is injected.

var query = from a in _unitOfWork.AppInfos.FindAll()
            join l in _unitOfWork.LogInfos.FindAll()
            on a.Id equals l.ApplicationId
            where l.Level == "ERROR" || l.Level == "FATAL"
            group l by new { a.Id, a.ApplicationName } into g
            select new LogInfoSummaryViewModel()
            {
                ApplicationId = g.Key.Id,
                ApplicationName = g.Key.ApplicationName,
                ErrorCount = g.Where(i => i.Level == "ERROR").Count(),
                FatalCount = g.Where(i => i.Level == "FATAL").Count()
            };
return query.AsEnumerable();
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As a side not building solution supporting different provides on top of the linq is way to disaster. Linq and IQueryable are leaky abstractions - each Linq provider can have its own "features" and limitations. Moreover EF itselfs adds some logic via custom extension methods for IQueryable (like Include or AsNoTracking in EFv4.1). These methods internally converts IQueryable to ORM specific classes.

If you want to have universal solution you must abandon Linq and add third pattern to form the abstraction. In addition to Repository and Unit of Work patterns you need custom Specification pattern. Generally you will reimplement NHibernate's Criteria API.


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