While it’s not a common task to do, you might want to iterate through all carts, or all carts with a specific criteria. For example, you might want to load all carts that have been last modified for more than 1 week, but less than 2 weeks, so you can send a reminder to the buyer (Ideas on the implementation of that feature is discussed in my book – Episerver Commerce A problem solution approach). Or you simply want do delete all the carts, as asked here https://world.episerver.com/forum/developer-forum/Episerver-Commerce/Thread-Container/2021/1/removing-all-active-carts/ . How?
In previous versions of Episerver Commerce, what you can do is to use OrderContext
to find orders and carts using the Order search API. However that does not work with non default implementations, such as the serializable carts. A better way would be to use the new abstraction – IOrderSearchService
. It takes a OrderSearchFilter
which allows things like paging to be set, and returns an OrderSearchResults<T>
which contains the matching collection of carts or orders, and the total count. When you have a lot of carts or orders to process, it’s nice (even important) to let the end users know the progress. However, it’s also important to know that, counting the matching carts/orders can be very expensive, so I’d suggest to avoid doing it every time.
The pattern that you can use is to do a first round (which do not load many carts, except one), to load total count. For subsequent calls you only load the carts, but set ReturnTotalCount
to false to skip loading the total count. If you want to delete all the carts (for fun and profit, obviously do not try this on production, unless if this is exactly what you want), the code can be written like this, with _orderSearchService
is an instance of IOrderSearchService
, and _orderRepository
is an instance of IOrderRepository
var deletedCartsTotalCount = 0;
var cartFilter = new CartFilter
{
RecordsToRetrieve = 1,
ExcludedCartNames = excludedCartNames,
ReturnTotalCount = true
};
//Get the total carts for status update.
var orderSearchResults = _orderSearchService.FindCarts(cartFilter);
var totalCount = orderSearchResults.TotalRecords;
cartFilter.ReturnTotalCount = false;
cartFilter.RecordsToRetrieve = 100;
var cartLoaded = 0;
do
{
var searchResults = _orderSearchService.FindCarts(cartFilter);
foreach (var cart in searchResults.Orders)
{
_orderRespository.Delete(cart.OrderLink);
deletedCartsTotalCount++;
}
OnStatusChanged($"Deleted {deletedCartsTotalCount} in {totalCount} carts.");
cartLoaded = searchResults.Orders.Count();
}
while (cartLoaded > 0);
A few notes:
- You might or might not exclude carts based on name
CartFil
ter has a few filters that you can play with, not just names.