Can anyone point me in the direction of some samples or instructions on how to achieve this please?
2 Answers
I have not used StructureMap, but I have done this with Autofac and SimpleInjector.
Autofac registration would look like this:
builder.Register(c => HttpContext.Current.GetOwinContext().Authentication).As<IAuthenticationManager>();
Registration in SimpleInjector looks like this:
container.RegisterPerWebRequest(() => HttpContext.Current.GetOwinContext().Authentication);
And from looking on StructureMap tutorial I can guess that registration there would be something like this:
ForRequestedType<IAuthenticationManager>()
.TheDefaultIs(() => HttpContext.Current.GetOwinContext().Authentication)
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1This is what I had thought it would be but it throws an error as the HttpContext.Current.GetOwinContext().Authentication is null.– wmcainshSep 2, 2014 at 15:40
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This means you are trying to resolve
IAuthenticationManager
before thereOwinContext
is created for the request. Usually this happens when you try to resolve it without http-request, i.e. inGlobal.asax
– trailmaxSep 2, 2014 at 15:58 -
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1Also there is a chance that StructureMap creates all the instances on registration and tries to resolve
IAuthManager
at the same time. Try doing late resolving. Something like this answer: stackoverflow.com/a/6567855/809357– trailmaxSep 4, 2014 at 9:33
This initially came about by converting Identity to use int as the unique key values as described here.
I then extended this and created a custom AuthenticationManager using IAuthenticationManager.
I then setup StructureMap as follows:
For<IAuthenticationManager>()
.Use<MyAuthenticationManager>(
() => new MyAuthenticationManager(HttpContext.Current.GetOwinContext().Authentication));
Thanks @trailmax