I am in the very early phases of a WinForms product rewrite, and I am trying to determine the "best" strategy for implementing a new solution structure. The current solution contains 50+ projects, and (for the most part) it contains all of the logic required to run the application. Several of the projects do have dependencies to projects that exist in a separate "Framework" solution, but that is being replaced / modified as well.
As I said, the current solution produces a WinForms product; furthermore everything is tightly coupled together, front to back. Additionally, we want to start offering a Web / Mobile solution in addition to/alongside our WinForms product. Because of the desired changes, I am considering breaking this out into several separate solutions. Details follow.
- Product.Framework Solution becomes Product.Core - A shared set of assemblies containing common interfaces, enums, structs, "helpers", etc.
- Product.Windows - MVC pattern. Contains all views and business logic necessary to run the WinForms product.
- Product.Web - MVC Pattern. Contains all views and business logic necessary to run the Web product.
- Product.Services - Hostable WCF services. Contains the public service layer that Web/Win/Mobile call into with the underlying DAL.
This is where I am looking for a sanity check: I am planning on implementing DI/IoC in both the WinForms and Web project (I am not so much worried about injecting into the WCF services); in my mind it makes sense to have interfaces of all the concrete entities (representation of database tables) and services in the Product.Core solution. The only reference I would possibly need to Product.Services in the Web and Winforms solutions would be to register the concrete types with the container.
Does this make sense? Is there something glaring that I have overlooked? Thank you for any and all feedback!