I have a bunch of existing sagas in various states of a long running process.
Recently we decided to make one of the properties on our IContainSagaData implementation unique by using the Saga.UniqueAttribute
(about which more here http://docs.particular.net/nservicebus/nservicebus-sagas-and-concurrency).
After deploying the change, we realized that all our old saga instances were not being found, and after further digging (thanks Charlie!) discovered that by adding the unique attribute, we were required to data fix all our existing sagas in Raven.
Now, this is pretty poor, kind of like adding a index to a database column and then finding that all the table data no longer select-able, but being what it is, we decided to create a tool for doing this.
So after creating and running this tool we've now patched up the old sagas so that they now resemble the new sagas (sagas created since we went live with the change).
However, despite all the data now looking right we're still not able to find old instances of the saga!
The tool we wrote does two things. For each existing saga, the tool:
- Adds a new RavenJToken called "NServiceBus-UniqueValue" to the saga metadata, setting the value to the same value as our unique property for that saga, and
- Creates a new document of type NServiceBus.Persistence.Raven.SagaPersister.SagaUniqueIdentity, setting the SagaId, SagaDocId, and UniqueValue fields accordingly.
My questions are:
- Is it sufficient to simply make the data look correct or is there something else we need to do?
- Another option we have is to revert the change which added the unique attribute. However in this scenario, would those new sagas which have been created since the change went in be OK with this?
Code for adding metadata token:
var policyKey = RavenJToken.FromObject(saga.PolicyKey); // This is the unique field
sagaDataMetadata.Add("NServiceBus-UniqueValue", policyKey);
Code for adding new doc:
var policyKeySagaUniqueId = new SagaUniqueIdentity
{
Id = "Matlock.Renewals.RenewalSaga.RenewalSagaData/PolicyKey/" + Guid.NewGuid().ToString(),
SagaId = saga.Id,
UniqueValue = saga.PolicyKey,
SagaDocId = "RenewalSaga/" + saga.Id.ToString()
};
session.Store(policyKeySagaUniqueId);
Any help much appreciated.
EDIT
Thanks to David's help on this we have fixed our problem - the key difference was we used the SagaUniqueIdentity.FormatId()
to generate our document IDs rather than a new guid - this was trivial tio do since we were already referencing the NServiceBus and NServiceBus.Core assemblies.