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In the old (pre .net core) era's entity framework 6 as shown in this blog post there is a way to configure an interceptor which can log all slow queries including a stack backtrace.

[ NOTE: In Entity Framework Core prior to version 3.0 this was not possible, thus the original question asked what to do instead. Since the time this question was asked, new options and new versions of EF Core have been released. This question is historical now in nature, and some of the answers that were added later reference other newer versions of EF Core, where interceptors may have been reintroduced, to achieve feature parity with the pre-core era entity framework ]

A question from 2015 about an earlier beta of what was then called EF7, suggests that it was not possible yet in asp.net vnext early betas.

Yet, the whole design of EF Core is to be composable, and in discussions on github bug tracker here that a technique might be possible where you subclass some low level class like SqlServerConnection and then override some method in there, to get some points you could hook before and after a query is executed, and add some low level logging if a millisecond timer value was executed.

(Edit: References to pre-release information from 2015 removed in 2020)

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Update: Interception of database operations is now available in EF Core 3.0.

Original answer:


EF Core does not have "interceptors" or similar lifecycle hooks yet. This feature is tracked here: https://github.com/aspnet/EntityFramework/issues/626.

Overriding a low-level component may be unnecessary if all you want is log output. Many low-level EF Core components already produce logging, logging including query execution. You can configure EF to use a custom logger factory by calling DbContextOptionsBuilder.UseLoggerFactory(ILoggerFactory factory). (See https://docs.asp.net/en/latest/fundamentals/logging.html and https://github.com/aspnet/Logging for more details on this logger interface.) EF Core produces some notable log events with well-define event IDs. (See Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Infrastructure.CoreLoggingEventId in 1.0.0-rc2, which was renamed to justMicrosoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Infrastructure.CoreEventId for 1.0.0 RTM.) See https://docs.efproject.net/en/latest/miscellaneous/logging.html for examples of doing this.

If you need additional logging beyond what EF Core components already produce, you will need to override EF Core's lower-level components. This is best done by overriding the existing component and added this overridding version to EF via dependency injection. Doing this requires configuring a custom service provider for EF to use internally. This is configured by DbContextOptionsBuilder.UseInternalServiceProvider(IServiceProvider services) See https://docs.efproject.net/en/latest/miscellaneous/internals/services.html for more details on how EF uses services internally.


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