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I have ASP.NET MVC application that uses Entity Framework as ORM. Now I'm using PerWebRequest lifestyle for EF ObjectContext.

While profiling application performance under high load, I found a bottleneck in ObjectContext creation.

I want to change ObjectContext's lifestyle to Pooled, but there is an issue.

In legacy part of my application there is Service Locator anti-pattern. So the ObjectContext could be Resolved many times per web request, and not explicitly released after usage.

With PerWebRequest it's not an issue, because ObjectContext instance instantiated once and released guaranteed on EndRequest event.

With default Pooled lifestyle different ObjectContext instance would be returned for each Resolve method call. But I want to re use single instance in web request scope. Also I want the instance to release (return to pool) automatically at the end of request (with PerWebRequestLifestyleModule).

It seems to me, that I should implement custom LifestyleManager or custom IPool for Windsor. But I don't know how to combine Pooled and PerWebRequest lifestyles, because of lack of experience in Windsor.

Can you give me any ideas? Thanks.

UPD: About ObjectContext's state and reasons to reuse

There is performance reason. Creation of ObjectContext is quite expensive. I'm searching for ways to avoid it. I have two approaches to deal with ObjectContext's stateful nature and to reuse it:

  • use stateless context (with ChangeTracking turned off) for queries. For commands use another instance.
  • reset context's state on returning to pool.

2 Answers 2

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Don't reuse an ObjectContext across requests. You will leak shared state between requests (and potentially between users). The ObjectContext class is not designed to be reused.

In your question I did not find a reason not to use PerWebRequest, so just use that.

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  • Thanks for your answer. See my update to understand the reason. Aug 15, 2012 at 12:46
  • Notice that I recommend reusing the context per request. This is absolutely the right thing to do. Creating one context per request is next to immeasurable. If you think otherwise I'd be interested to see a measurement of yours.; A stateless context might work, I don't know enough about EF to tell. Not sure if resetting the context's state is possible. Notice that you are introducing an element of nondeterminism here. Usually, requests are 100% isolated, now they are not. It is like threading bugs: Nondeterministic, undebuggable. If it was my decision as the lead I'd forbid to do this.
    – usr
    Aug 15, 2012 at 13:23
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In your case, you could change the lifestyle to be tied to the current thread, ensuring that each worker thread in the web app gets an instance

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  • No, the ObjectContext class should not be reused. Also, a single ASP.NET request can execute on multiple threads (non-concurrently, but still on multiple threads).
    – usr
    Aug 11, 2012 at 19:15
  • Right! I'm not an entity framework kind of guy - from the question I deduced that the ObjectContext could in fact be reused because of his own suggestion of using the pooled lifecycle
    – mookid8000
    Aug 12, 2012 at 7:49

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