WCF RIA Services had this situation in mind when it was created. You can easily do it all in one SubmitChanges
request and in one database transaction (depending on your DB and/or ORM). However, if you provide some more information about your objects (POCO, EF, etc.), you'll get a better answer.
That said, I'll take a wild guess at your objects as defined on the server.
public class Product
{
[Key]
public int? ProductID { get; set; }
// ... more properties ...
[Association("Product-ProductDollars", "ProductID", "ProductID", IsForeignKey = false)]
[Include]
[Composition]
public ICollection<ProductDollar> ProductDollars { get; set; }
}
public class ProductDollar
{
[Key]
public int? ProductDollarID { get; set; }
public int? ProductID { get; set; }
// ... more properties ...
[Association("Product-ProductDollars", "ProductID", "ProductID", IsForeignKey = true)]
[Include]
public Product Product { get; set; }
}
And your DomainService looks something like
public class ProductDomainService : DomainService
{
public IQueryable<Product> GetProducts()
{
// Get data from the DB
}
public void InsertProduct(Product product)
{
// Insert the Product into the database
// Depending on how your objects get in the DB, the ProductID will be set
// and later returned to the client
}
public void InsertProductDollar(ProductDollar productDollar)
{
// Insert the ProductDollar in the DB
}
// Leaving out the Update and Delete methods
}
Now, on your client, you'll have code that creates and adds these entities.
var context = new ProductDomainContext();
var product = new Product();
context.Products.Add(product);
product.ProductDollars.Add(new ProductDollar());
product.ProductDollars.Add(new ProductDollar());
context.SubmitChanges();
This results in one request sent to the DomainService
. However, WCF RIA splits this ChangeSet
containing the 3 inserts into 3 calls to your DomainService
methods:
InsertProduct(Product product)
InsertProductDollar(ProductDollar productDollar)
InsertProductDollar(ProductDollar productDollar)
If your DomainService
performs all inserts in one transaction, the ProductID can be correctly managed by your ORM.