Questions tagged [nsmanagedobjectcontext]

An instance of NSManagedObjectContext represents a single “object space”. Its primary responsibility is to manage a collection of managed objects. These objects form a group of related model objects that represent an internally consistent view of one or more persistent stores. A single managed object instance exists in one and only one context, but multiple copies of an object can exist in different contexts. Available in iOS 3.0 and later in CoreData.

An instance of NSManagedObjectContext represents a single “object space” or scratch pad in an application. Its primary responsibility is to manage a collection of managed objects. These objects form a group of related model objects that represent an internally consistent view of one or more persistent stores. A single managed object instance exists in one and only one context, but multiple copies of an object can exist in different contexts. Thus object uniquing is scoped to a particular context.

Life-cycle Management The context is a powerful object with a central role in the life-cycle of managed objects, with responsibilities from life-cycle management (including faulting) to validation, inverse relationship handling, and undo/redo. Through a context you can retrieve or “fetch” objects from a persistent store, make changes to those objects, and then either discard the changes or—again through the context—commit them back to the persistent store. The context is responsible for watching for changes in its objects and maintains an undo manager so you can have finer-grained control over undo and redo. You can insert new objects and delete ones you have fetched, and commit these modifications to the persistent store.

All objects fetched from an external store are registered in a context together with a global identifier (an instance of NSManagedObjectID) that’s used to uniquely identify each object to the external store.

Parent Store Managed object contexts have a parent store from which they retrieve data representing managed objects and through which they commit changes to managed objects.

Prior to OS X v10.7 and iOS v5.0, the parent store is always a persistent store coordinator. In OS X v10.7 and later and iOS v5.0 and later, the parent store may be another managed object context. Ultimately the root of a context’s ancestry must be a persistent store coordinator. The coordinator provides the managed object model and dispatches requests to the various persistent stores containing the data.

If a context’s parent store is another managed object context, fetch and save operations are mediated by the parent context instead of a coordinator. This pattern has a number of usage scenarios, including:

Performing background operations on a second thread or queue.

Managing discardable edits, such as in an inspector window or view.

As the first scenario implies, a parent context can service requests from children on different threads. You cannot, therefore, use parent contexts created with the thread confinement type (see Concurrency).

When you save changes in a context, the changes are only committed “one store up.” If you save a child context, changes are pushed to its parent. Changes are not saved to the persistent store until the root context is saved. (A root managed object context is one whose parent context is nil.) In addition, a parent does not pull changes from children before it saves. You must save a child context if you want ultimately to commit the changes.

Notifications A context posts notifications at various points—see NSManagedObjectContextObjectsDidChangeNotification for example. Typically, you should register to receive these notifications only from known contexts:

[[NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter] addObserver:self
                                      selector:@selector(<#Selector name#>)
                                      name:NSManagedObjectContextDidSaveNotification
                                      object:<#A managed object context#>];

Several system frameworks use Core Data internally. If you register to receive these notifications from all contexts (by passing nil as the object parameter to a method such as addObserver:selector:name:object:), then you may receive unexpected notifications that are difficult to handle.

Concurrency Core Data uses thread (or serialized queue) confinement to protect managed objects and managed object contexts (see Concurrency with Core Data). A consequence of this is that a context assumes the default owner is the thread or queue that allocated it—this is determined by the thread that calls its init method. You should not, therefore, initialize a context on one thread then pass it to a different thread. Instead, you should pass a reference to a persistent store coordinator and have the receiving thread/queue create a new context derived from that. If you use NSOperation, you must create the context in main (for a serial queue) or start (for a concurrent queue).

In OS X v10.7 and later and iOS v5.0 and later, when you create a context you can specify the concurrency pattern with which you will use it using initWithConcurrencyType:. When you create a managed object context using initWithConcurrencyType:, you have three options for its thread (queue) association

Confinement (NSConfinementConcurrencyType)

For backwards compatibility, this is the default. You promise that context will not be used by any thread other than the one on which you created it. In general, to make the behavior explicit you’re encouraged to use one of the other types instead.

You can only use this concurrency type if the managed object context’s parent store is a persistent store coordinator.

Private queue (NSPrivateQueueConcurrencyType)

The context creates and manages a private queue.

Main queue (NSMainQueueConcurrencyType)

The context is associated with the main queue, and as such is tied into the application’s event loop, but it is otherwise similar to a private queue-based context. You use this queue type for contexts linked to controllers and UI objects that are required to be used only on the main thread.

If you use contexts using the confinement pattern, you send the contexts messages directly; it’s up to you to ensure that you send the messages from the right queue.

You use contexts using the queue-based concurrency types in conjunction with performBlock: and performBlockAndWait:. You group “standard” messages to send to the context within a block to pass to one of these methods. There are two exceptions:

Setter methods on queue-based managed object contexts are thread-safe. You can invoke these methods directly on any thread.

If your code is executing on the main thread, you can invoke methods on the main queue style contexts directly instead of using the block based API.

performBlock: and performBlockAndWait: ensure the block operations are executed on the queue specified for the context. The performBlock: method returns immediately and the context executes the block methods on its own thread. With the performBlockAndWait: method, the context still executes the block methods on its own thread, but the method doesn’t return until the block is executed.

It’s important to appreciate that blocks are executed as a distinct body of work. As soon as your block ends, anyone else can enqueue another block, undo changes, reset the context, and so on. Thus blocks may be quite large, and typically end by invoking save:.

__block NSError *error;
__block BOOL savedOK = NO;
[myMOC performBlockAndWait:^{
    // Do lots of things with the context.
    savedOK = [myMOC save:&error];
}];

You can also perform other operations, such as:

NSFetchRequest *fr = [NSFetchRequest fetchRequestWithEntityName:@"Entity"];
__block NSUInteger rCount = 0;

[context performBlockAndWait:^() {
    NSError *error;
    rCount = [context countForFetchRequest:fr error:&error];
    if (rCount == NSNotFound) {
        // Handle the error.
    } }];
NSLog(@"Retrieved %d items", (int)rCount);

Subclassing Notes You are strongly discouraged from subclassing NSManagedObjectContext. The change tracking and undo management mechanisms are highly optimized and hence intricate and delicate. Interposing your own additional logic that might impact processPendingChanges can have unforeseen consequences. In situations such as store migration, Core Data will create instances of NSManagedObjectContext for its own use. Under these circumstances, you cannot rely on any features of your custom subclass. Any NSManagedObject subclass must always be fully compatible with NSManagedObjectContext (that is, it cannot rely on features of a subclass of NSManagedObjectContext).

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Magical Record create/fetch entity in separate thread

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Context does not save the changes with error 1550

I'm trying to update an entity and save the changes. I'm getting always the following error: The operation couldn’t be completed. (Cocoa error 1550.) Method: - (BOOL) updateEvent:(EventDTO*)eventDTO{ BOOL saved = YES; [self…
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CoreData deadlock with multiple threads

I'm experiencing the same deadlock issue (that is quite common on SO) that occurs in the multiple NSManagedObjectContexts & multiple threads scenario. In some of my view controllers, my app uses background threads to get data from a web service,…
bobsmells
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What is the difference between managed object context save and refreshObject:mergeChanges:

Hello what's the difference between [self.context refreshObject:site mergeChanges:YES]; and [self.context save:nil]; Sometimes I use them both, sometimes I use only save. It works in both cases.
Devfly
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I've been banging my head against the wall with this bug. Basically relationships aren't being merged from one context to another correctly. Let's say I have two entity types in my model, Student and Teacher. A student can only have one teacher and…
aloo
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CoreData - How to do NSFetchRequest with temporary context with NSPrivateQueueConcurrencyType?

Since iOS 5, CoreData introduces its own private queue where you can let some operations (especially save context) running in background. This must be done via [context performBlock:...]. It is easy very good for saving the context. However, how…
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managedObjectContext deleteObject:matches not deleting data from Core data base?

Am trying to delete row from core data base in ios application buts its not working, if (editingStyle == UITableViewCellEditingStyleDelete) { appDelegate = [[UIApplication sharedApplication] delegate]; NSEntityDescription…
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I've been using Core Data for a while, but I just asked myself a question, I myself tend to always create some kind of local store class from which I manage the Core Data model, this would be a singleton class which has a reference to the managed…
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MagicalRecord saveInBackgroundWithBlock fetch returns faulted objects

I am currently developing an iOS application that is heavily dependant on CoreData and persisting information constantly. With the help of MagicalRecord, i've set up background saving using the saveInBackgroundWithBlock function. The problem that I…
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iOS NSFetchedResultsController updating incorrectly with background context

I have a table view hooked up to a NSFetchedResultsController: self.fetchedResultsController = [[NSFetchedResultsController alloc] initWithFetchRequest:request …
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Strange behavior when using child/parent NSManagedObjectContext

I'm developing an application where I need to both calculate things (multiple seconds operations) and write things (sync data with a server) on a background thread. Because of this I use two NSManagedObjectContexts (MOC), a child and a parent, and…
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refresh reference ManagedObjectContext

in my iOS app i have a core data, and i have notice that sometime, in a specific view, when i retrieve information from core data, are not always up to date, i'm explain well: if i update some value in the core data, and then i go in in a specific…
Piero
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iPhone iOS how to merge Core Data NSManagedObjectContext?

I'm trying to download some JSON objects in the background and am doing quite a bit of multi threading. Once the operation completes, I noticed that this assertion fails: NSAssert([user.managedObjectContext isEqual:[AppUser…
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CoreData relationships are nil after mergeChangesFromContextDidSaveNotification

Having some truly strange behavior with Core Data on iOS. I have a NSManagedObjectContext for my main thread used to read data from a SQLLite persistent store and display it to the user. I also have background processes managed by an…
vm2000
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Recipes to pass NSManagedObjects amongs UIViewControllers

Within an application it's possible to have different UIViewControllers that need to share the same NSManagedObject. I'm usually do the following: @interface CustomController : UIViewController @property (nonatomic, retain) ProductNSManagedObject*…
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