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I've recently started using Entity Framework migrations and noticed that the database name is not pulling through for me when I run the Update-Database command.

My connectionstring is:

<connectionStrings>
<add name="DataContext" connectionString="Server=.\SQLEXPRESS;Initial Catalog=TestDB;Trusted_Connection=Yes;" providerName="System.Data.SqlClient" />
</connectionStrings>

The very first time I run Update-Database my database is created with the correct name TestDB. However, as soon as I make a change to one of my entities it will not update any longer for me unless I add a Start Up Project Name (I'm using a multi project solution):

Update-Database -StartUpProjectName "TestDB.Data"

This then makes another new database which migrations will always continue to use. I don't mind having to put in the StartUpProjectName command but is there a way to override the default name for the database this produces? It always creates the database as

TestDB.Data.DataContext

Is there a way to ensure that the database created when passing the StartUpProject name is just called TestDB or is this a limitation of using the StartUpProjectName setting?

As a note, I think the reason I need to specify the StartUpProjectName is that I have a multilayer project setup. The Migrations Configuration file is in my 'Data' project, the entities/models are in my 'Domain' project, etc. I also do not currently have any initialize options in my Global.asax.cs file as I would have used previously on code first ef 4.2. So in my project I just have a DataContext in my Data project and the Migrations Configuration in that project also.

EDIT:

Since I originally setup this question I stumbled onto the 'correct' way to name a database in a multiproject solution. While the answer below will work it does mean you are duplicating your web.config in another area which isn't an ideal solution. Instead you can just put the name into your DbContext by doing something like this (DataContext is just the name I used in my project):

public class DataContext : DbContext
{
    public DataContext() : base("DatabaseNameHere")
    { }

    public DbSet<Table1> Table1 { get; set; }
    public DbSet<Table2> Table2 { get; set; }

    public virtual void Commit()
    {
        base.SaveChanges();
    }
}

Thanks,

Rich

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1  
Thanks for your edited answer..helped me a lot.. – Josh Nov 24 '12 at 16:10
Edited answer is a gem! – P6345uk Jan 11 at 9:45

3 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

When doing update-database you should specify the project that contains the migrations. Make sure that you have an app.config file in that project that contains the correct connection string.

When splitting up an application over several projects, the connection string used when running the app is the one of the project started. When migrating, the connection string used is the one of the project containing the migrations.

When I did a similar setup I had to add the connection string in two places. A bit awkward, but it works.

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Just tested that out and it worked! Thanks for the suggestion - would never have figured out to put the connection string in the other project! Thanks again :) – Richard Reddy Feb 25 '12 at 14:36

You can avoid managing it in app.config by offering it as a parameter:

Update-Database -Verbose 
 -ConnectionString "CONNECTIONSTRING" 
 -ConnectionProviderName "System.Data.SqlClient"
 -StartupProjectName WEBSITE_PROJECT -ProjectName MIGRATION_PROJECT

Easy-piezy, if you love to type endlessly.

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what if it can't find "System.Data.SqlClient"? – Tim Lovell-Smith Apr 11 at 21:57

I tried with Latest EF5 from Nuget.

However Update-Database does not read the App.config from the project that contain the migrations (just like the answer 1 year ago) but it will only read *.config from start up project. It is great but I discover how Add-Migration and Update-Database find a suitable connection string here:

  1. It trying to get "DefaultConnection" connection string first
  2. Then it trying to get connection string name based on context class name. E.g. I have MyContext class derived from DbContext so I can use "MyContext" connection string name. Useful when I have multiple db connections.
  3. If both the above connection string name does not found, it will failed and show no "DefaultConnection" connection string unless you suply the -ConnectionStringName parameter. See get-help Update-Database to view the help page in the Package Manager Console.

There is no retry or fallback attempt, so if the "DefaultConnection" contain wrong connection string, it will simply show error.

If both DefaultConnection and context name exist in the connection strings, DefaultConnection will take precedence.

I would prefer #2 become the first try because the name is more specific but the above steps is what EF5 Migrations do when trying to connection to db.

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1  
I was running into the same issue and found out, similar to this poster, that migrations use a connection string in the start up project, and the name of the connection string is the same name as the context. – jeff.eynon Feb 18 at 16:08

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