Fabio,

Forgive me, but I still don't understand why, in one occasion, it
fires the event, and not on another, depending on how the entity was
loaded. I thought all entities were equal, but it seems some are more
equal than others! ;-)
Please, if you have some time, do check my code; it is very simple and
straightforward.

RP


On May 24, 3:20 pm, Fabio Maulo <[email protected]> wrote:
> NH does not check a state of an loaded entity through INotifyPropertyChanged
> so the only way to know if a loaded entity-state is dirty is asking to those
> events if they have something to do.
> A similar behavior is done by the flush-mode=auto when you fire a query...
> In practice:
> if you are using lazy-properties (a simple value with lazy or a relation
> with no-proxy) we may have an issue related to it... but this is only a
> guess just because only you and God knows your mappings/classes.
>
> The fact that session.IsDirty fire the SaveOrUpdate event, where neither
> inserts nor deletes are presents, is not an issue, instead it is the default
> behavior that you can completely override.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 11:11 AM, Ricardo Peres <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Fabio,
>
> > Don't get me wrong: I have followed the stack trace, and I know why
> > this is happening (in the code); I just don't understand it.
> > First of all: from a conceptual point of view, should the
> > ISession.IsDirty() fire SaveOrUpdate, on non-dirty entities, or on any
> > entities at all?
> > Second: why, if we are loading the entity by its it, the event does
> > not fire, and if we load it from a property of another entity, it
> > does?
> > IMHO, if you answer yes to the first question, there is a bug: it
> > isn't being fired if the entity is not directly loaded.
> > I don't want to take your time, just to understand this. Am I the only
> > one who doesn't understand this behavior?
>
> > Thanks!
>
> > RP
>
> > On May 24, 3:05 pm, Fabio Maulo <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > The only thing done by IsDirty is just fire an event
> > > DirtyCheckEvent dcEvent = new DirtyCheckEvent(this);
> > > IDirtyCheckEventListener[] dirtyCheckEventListener =
> > > listeners.DirtyCheckEventListeners;
> > > for (int i = 0; i < dirtyCheckEventListener.Length; i++)
> > > {
> > > dirtyCheckEventListener[i].OnDirtyCheck(dcEvent);}
>
> > > return dcEvent.Dirty;
> > > You can disable/replace/override that event.
>
> > > On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 10:21 AM, Ricardo Peres <[email protected]>
> > wrote:
> > > > Fabio,
> > > > You have closed JIRA issues NH-2727 saying that it is not an issue.
> > > > Perhaps you can explain me, because this is bugging me, why does the
> > > > following line raise the SaveOrUpdate event and the next doesn't:
>
> > > > //raises SaveOrUpdate
> > > > User u = session.Query<User>().FirstOrDefault();
> > > > UserGroup ug = u.UserGroup.First();
>
> > > > //does not raise
> > > > UserGroup ug = session.Query<UserGroup>().FirstOrDefault();
> > > > User u = ug.User;
>
> > > > By the way, in general, why does ISession.IsDirty() fire any events?
> > > > Shouldn't it just check the current state of entities in memory?
>
> > > > Thank you for your time, once again!
>
> > > > RP
>
> > > --
> > > Fabio Maulo
>
> --
> Fabio Maulo

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