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Comments on Mixing "operational" database models with archiving ones in the database context

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Mixing "operational" database models with archiving ones in the database context

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Context

Our product owner has realized that some entities are duplicated from time to time and that a merge is required. This should clean up existing duplicates and also allow special users to merge entities in the future.

The merge process is defined as follows (this should be done atomically):

  • identify "to be merged" and "main" entities
  • archive "to be merged" information
  • parent most of the children of "to be merged" to "main"
  • write some archiving metadata (who, when etc.)
  • remove "to be merged" (with cascade)

The entity is rather used as it has a couple of dozens of other entities referencing it (foreign keys).

Dilemma

I am wondering how to proceed about this as I see two main options.

Entity Framework approach

  • add all archive related models in the database context
  • easily archive data by mapping existing models to archive ones
  • all changes are done in a context transaction

Pros: rather easy to implement

Cons: bloats the context with archive related models (add a dozen models that have very similar names to the operational ones and might create confusion when having to work with DbSet related to these).

SQL approach

Create a stored procedure to tackle the archiving.

Pros: avoid bloating the context and app with archiving functionality

Cons: use SQL stored procedure which is harder to write and maintain.

Another way is to create another database context for archiving stuff, share the connection string and explicitly handle the transaction.

I am wondering if there is any best practice for such functionality.

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Can you clarify the kind of "bloat" you are concerned about? Memory use? Name collision? Redundancy i... (2 comments)
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Generally speaking, switching data access technologies to avoid a naming conflict seems overkill. Doing that will increase the set of technologies contributors must be familiar with, and impede code reuse.

So, how to solve the similar names part? I'd probably choose names that are obviously different, for instance by requiring a big eye catchy prefix like ArchivedOrder. Using a prefix ensures that code completion will only suggest archive tables if a programmer explicitly types "Archive", and thus makes it very hard to accidentally refer to the wrong table.

Other, entity framework specific, solutions may exist, but alas I am not familiar enough with EF to advise you on their applicability.

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General (1 comment)
General
Alexei‭ wrote over 3 years ago

That's a good idea. Having clear names like ArchivedOrder is OK as I can still map to something that makes sense in DB like arc.Order, as I want to define a separate schema for these tables. 10x.