World is now on Opti ID! Learn more

Nicklas Israelsson
Nov 15, 2010
  4147
(0 votes)

PageEntity for Community 4.0

PageEntities is a custom entity that links EPiServer Community functionality (rating, visits, comments etc) to ordinary EPiServer pages. It was first introduced by Per Hemmingson in this blog post and have since then been a popular addition for several projects. We use it on this website for instance.

The problem is that the code attached in his post is for Community 3.2 and doesn’t work together with the new Community 4 because of changes to the API. For details on the API changes, look for the tech note named:

Migrating EPiServer Community 3.2 to 4.0 and EPiServer Mail 4.4 to 5.0

Since last week we’re running Community 4 on world and in order to do the upgrade we needed to update the code for PageEntities. And since I’m such a friendly fellow I thought I’d share the changes made to the rest of the community. Hopefully I can save time for someone looking to do the same upgrade or adding PageEntities to a new community 4 project.

Changes made

The “big” change is that I removed the usage of SiteId in the code completely. Sites have been removed in favor of the category system in Community 4 and since we used the same SiteId for all our saved PageEntities we didn’t really need it. If you need it you need to make the appropriate changes to the code.

Most of the changes made were similar to this one:

From:

   1: DatabaseHandler.RunInTransaction(delegate
   2:  {
   3:      DatabaseHandler.GetScalar("spUpdatePageEntity",
   4:                                tpr.ID, (int) tpr.EntityType, tpr.SiteID);
   5:      UpdateEntity(tpr);
   6:  });

To:

   1: DatabaseHandler.Instance.RunInTransaction(delegate
   2:  {
   3:      DatabaseHandler.Instance.GetScalar("spUpdatePageEntity",
   4:                                tpr.ID, (int) tpr.EntityType);
   5:      UpdateEntity(tpr);
   6:  });

In other words, we started using the new static instances of the handlers. That was needed on several places but you get a lot of help from the compiler when doing this.

Another thing that was needed was a couple of methods to the PageEntityProvider class. This is because the interface IEntityProvider had gotten a few more methods. Namely: AddEntityInstance, RemoveEntityInstance, UpdateEntityInstance and GetSupportedOperations. They were all implemented similar to this (the difference is what method to use in the return statement):

   1: public IEntity AddEntityInstance(IEntity entity)
   2: {
   3:     if (!(entity is PageEntity))
   4:     {
   5:         throw new EPiServer.Common.Exceptions.NonCommittedEntityException(entity);
   6:     }
   7:     return PageEntityHandler.AddPageEntity((PageEntity)entity);
   8: }

All changes are available in  the attached .zip file at the bottom of this post.

SQL changes

Observe that the SQL script (PageEntityProviderSQL.sql) is changed so that all created stored procedures doesn’t use any SiteId any more.

Also note that I included a script to move data from one database to another in the same way that the migration script for community work. That script is called: PageEntity-MoveDataInTblPageEntityWithoutSiteId.sql

The script moves all data in your old database to the new excluding any values in the SiteId column.

There is no error handling in that script and it requires you to run the PageEntityProviderSQL script first to create the correct table in the new database. Remember to backup any database affected before attempting to run these scripts. The script don’t delete anything, but it’s better to be safe than sorry.

Files

Nov 15, 2010

Comments

Please login to comment.
Latest blogs
Make Global Assets Site- and Language-Aware at Indexing Time

I had a support case the other day with a question around search on global assets on a multisite. This is the result of that investigation. This co...

dada | Jun 26, 2025

The remote server returned an error: (400) Bad Request – when configuring Azure Storage for an older Optimizely CMS site

How to fix a strange issue that occurred when I moved editor-uploaded files for some old Optimizely CMS 11 solutions to Azure Storage.

Tomas Hensrud Gulla | Jun 26, 2025 |

Enable Opal AI for your Optimizely products

Learn how to enable Opal AI, and meet your infinite workforce.

Tomas Hensrud Gulla | Jun 25, 2025 |

Deploying to Optimizely Frontend Hosting: A Practical Guide

Optimizely Frontend Hosting is a cloud-based solution for deploying headless frontend applications - currently supporting only Next.js projects. It...

Szymon Uryga | Jun 25, 2025

World on Opti ID

We're excited to announce that world.optimizely.com is now integrated with Opti ID! What does this mean for you? New Users:  You can now log in wit...

Patrick Lam | Jun 22, 2025

Avoid Scandinavian Letters in File Names in Optimizely CMS

Discover how Scandinavian letters in file names can break media in Optimizely CMS—and learn a simple code fix to automatically sanitize uploads for...

Henning Sjørbotten | Jun 19, 2025 |