Anybody know why UserManager.Create(user, password); might be throwing EntityValidationError saying Id is required.
Could it have something to do with my UserManager.  It is setup like this:
public class MyAppDb : IdentityDbContext<ApplicationUser, ApplicationRole, string, ApplicationUserLogin, ApplicationUserRole, ApplicationUserClaim>
{
    public static MyAppDb Create()
    {
        return new MyAppDb();
    }
    public MyAppDb()
        : base("MyAppDb")
    {
    }
}
public class ApplicationUserStore : UserStore<ApplicationUser, ApplicationRole, string, ApplicationUserLogin, ApplicationUserRole, ApplicationUserClaim>
{
    public ApplicationUserStore(MyAppDb context)
        : base(context)
    {
    }
}
public class ApplicationUserManager : UserManager<ApplicationUser, string>
{
    public ApplicationUserManager(IUserStore<ApplicationUser, string> store)
        : base(store)
    {
    }
}
And in the controller like this:
public class AccountController : Controller
{
    public AccountController()
        : this(new ApplicationUserManager(new ApplicationUserStore(new MyAppDb())))
    {
    }
    public AccountController(ApplicationUserManager userManager)
    {
        UserManager = userManager;
        UserManager.PasswordValidator = (IIdentityValidator<string>)new MinimumLengthValidator(8);
        UserManager.UserValidator = new UserValidator<ApplicationUser>(UserManager) { AllowOnlyAlphanumericUserNames = false, RequireUniqueEmail = true };
    }
    public ApplicationUserManager UserManager { get; private set; }
    ...
}
ApplicationUser, ApplicationRole, ApplicationUserLogin, ApplicationUserRole, and ApplicationUserClaim all inherit from the Identity classes respectively.
Anyone see anything wrong?  I was able to register users (UserManager.Create()) before I created all the custom Identity classes without the Id issue.
UPDATE: It seems specifying string for the Key has broken the auto-generated Key in the database context. That is my best guess. It now is looking for me to set the Id. I don't want to, I want it to work the way it did before I created the custom fields on the User.
It appears specifying string tells the UserStore that you will provide the Id.  This issue went away when I solved the following issue Is there a way to create a custom User and Role without specifying the TKey on IdenitityUser, IdentityRole, and IdentityDbContext?
-OR-
Just give it an id like this: Guid.NewGuid().ToString()
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