Entities are one of the core concepts of DDD (Domain Driven Design). Eric Evans describe it as "An object that is not fundamentally defined by its attributes, but rather by a thread of continuity and identity".
An entity is generally mapped to a table in a relational database.
Entities are derived from Entity<TKey>
class as shown below:
public class Person : Entity<int>
{
public string Name { get; set; }
public DateTime CreationTime { get; set; }
public Person()
{
CreationTime = DateTime.Now;
}
}
If you do not want derive your entity from the base
Entity<TKey>
class, you can directly implementIEntity<TKey>
interface.
Entity<TKey>
class just defines an Id
property with the given primary key type, which is int
in the sample above. It can be other types like string
, Guid
, long
or whatever you need.
Entity class also overrides the equality operator (==) to easily check if two entities are equal (they are equals if they are same entity type and their Ids are equals).
Some entities may need to have composite keys. In that case, you can derive your entity from the non-generic Entity
class. Example:
public class UserRole : Entity
{
public Guid UserId { get; set; }
public Guid RoleId { get; set; }
public DateTime CreationTime { get; set; }
public Phone()
{
}
}
For the example above, the composite key is composed of UserId
and RoleId
. For a relational database, it is the composite primary key of the related table.
Notice that you also need to define keys of the entity in your object-to-relational mapping (ORM) configuration.
Composite primary keys has a restriction with repositories. Since it has not known Id property, you can not use
IRepository<TEntity, TKey>
for these entities. However, you can always useIRepository<TEntity>
. See repository documentation (TODO: link) for more.
"Aggregate is a pattern in Domain-Driven Design. A DDD aggregate is a cluster of domain objects that can be treated as a single unit. An example may be an order and its line-items, these will be separate objects, but it's useful to treat the order (together with its line items) as a single aggregate." (see the full description)
AggregateRoot
class extends the Entity
class. So, it also has an Id
property by default.
Notice that ABP creates default repositories only for aggregate roots by default. However, it's possible to include all entities. See repository documentation (TODO: link) for more.
ABP does not force you to use aggregate roots, you can only use the Entity
class as defined before. However, if you want to implement DDD and want to create aggregate root classes, there are some best practices you may want to consider:
- An aggregate root is responsible to preserve it's own integrity. This is also true for all entities, but aggregate root has responsibility for it's sub entities too. So, the aggregate root always be in a valid state.
- An aggregate root can be referenced by it's Id. Do not reference it by navigation property.
- An aggregate root is treated as a single unit. It's retrieved and updated as a single unit. It's generally considered as a transaction boundary.
- Work with sub-entities over the aggregate root, do not modify them independently.
This is a full sample of an aggregate root with a related sub-entity collection:
public class Order : AggregateRoot<Guid>
{
public virtual string ReferenceNo { get; protected set; }
public virtual int TotalItemCount { get; protected set; }
public virtual DateTime CreationTime { get; protected set; }
public virtual List<OrderLine> OrderLines { get; protected set; }
protected Order()
{
}
public Order(Guid id, string referenceNo)
{
Check.NotNull(referenceNo, nameof(referenceNo));
Id = id;
ReferenceNo = referenceNo;
OrderLines = new List<OrderLine>();
}
public void AddProduct(Guid productId, int count)
{
if (count <= 0)
{
throw new ArgumentException(
"You can not add zero or negative count of products!",
nameof(count)
);
}
var existingLine = OrderLines.FirstOrDefault(ol => ol.ProductId == productId);
if (existingLine == null)
{
OrderLines.Add(new OrderLine(this.Id, productId, count));
}
else
{
existingLine.ChangeCount(existingLine.Count + count);
}
TotalItemCount += count;
}
}
public class OrderLine : Entity
{
public virtual Guid OrderId { get; protected set; }
public virtual Guid ProductId { get; protected set; }
public virtual int Count { get; protected set; }
protected OrderLine()
{
}
internal OrderLine(Guid orderId, Guid productId, int count)
{
OrderId = orderId;
ProductId = productId;
Count = count;
}
internal void ChangeCount(int newCount)
{
Count = newCount;
}
}
If you do not want derive your aggregate root from the base
AggregateRoot<TKey>
class, you can directly implementIAggregateRoot<TKey>
interface.
Order
is an aggregate root with Guid
type Id
property. It has a collection of OrderLine
entities. OrderLine
is another entity with a composite primary key (OrderLine
and ProductId
).
While this example may not implement all best practices of an aggregate root, it follows some good practices:
Order
has a public constructor that takes minimal requirements to construct anOrder
instance. So, it's not possible to create an order without an id and reference number. The protected/private constructor is only necessary to deserialize object while reading from a data source.OrderLine
constructor is internal, so it only allows to be created by the domain layer. It's used inside ofOrder.AddProduct
method.Order.AddProduct
implements the business rule to add a product to an order.- All properties have
protected
setters. This is to prevent entity from arbitrary changes from outside of the entity. For instance, it would be dangerous to setTotalItemCount
without adding a new product to the order. It's value is maintained by theAddProduct
method.
ABP does not force you to apply any DDD rule or pattern. However, it tries to make it possible and easier when you want to apply. The documentation also follows this principle.
While it's not common (and not suggested) for aggregate roots, it's possible to define composite keys just as defined for entities above. Use non-generic AggregateRoot
base class in that case.