Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

Given the following registrations

builder.Register<A>().As<I>();
builder.Register<B>().As<I>();
builder.Register<C>().As<I>();

var container = builder.Build();

I am looking to resolve all instances of type I as a IEnumerable (Array or Collection it doesnt matter).

In Windsor I would have written the following.

foreach(I i in container.ResolveAll<I>())
{
 ...
}

I am migrating from Windsor to Autofac 1.4.4.561 but can't see the equivalent syntax.

Thanks.

share|improve this question
Any reason, that you want to share, for why you are moving from Windsor to Autofac? – Peter Lillevold Sep 10 '09 at 18:25
The thing that I really like with Autofac is being able to express dynamic component construction through lamda expressions. By using expressions as opposed to autowiring there is less room for misunderstanding of what the container is "doing" when it resolves a type (note: autofac supports autowiring if you prefer). Finally the Windsor API has become so huge as to cater for every possibility it gives the impression of complexity, when IOC as a concept is actually quite simple. Not saying I will never use Windsor again, just trying out the other options. – crowleym Sep 10 '09 at 20:51

2 Answers

up vote 13 down vote accepted

Update for current(2.X - 3.0) versions of Autofac:

You don't need to do anything special. Autofac has collection support out of the box, along with other adapters that can wrap your components with additional functionality.

To register:

var builder = new ContainerBuilder();

builder.Register<ConsoleLogger>()
  .As<ILogger>();

builder.Register<EmailLogger>()
  .As<ILogger>()
  .PreserveExistingDefaults(); //keeps console logger as the default

To Consume:

var loggers = container.Resolve<IEnumerable<ILogger>>();

Note that this is the same usage as the pre-2.x ImplicitCollectionSupportModule, but baked right in.

For versions under 2.x

Two ways:

1) Use the collection registration

var builder = new ContainerBuilder();
builder.RegisterCollection<ILogger>()
  .As<IEnumerable<ILogger>>();

builder.Register<ConsoleLogger>()
  .As<ILogger>()
  .MemberOf<IEnumerable<ILogger>>();

builder.Register<EmailLogger>()
  .As<ILogger>()
  .MemberOf<IEnumerable<ILogger>>();

Then:

var loggers = container.Resolve<IEnumerable<ILogger>>();

which gives you an IEnumerable.

or 2) You can use the ImplicitCollectionSupport module, which will make your code above work as listed - just add the registerModule call...

builder.RegisterModule(new ImplicitCollectionSupportModule());
builder.Register(component1).As<ILogger>;
builder.Register(component2).As<ILogger>;

Then resolve a collection of ILogger rather than looking for resolving all.

var loggers = container.Resolve<IEnumerable<ILogger>>();

which gives you an IEnumerable, again.

share|improve this answer
Perfect. Went for option one as its seems more efficient because the container "knows" what to put in the collection. Second option iterates though every registration in the container hierarchy looking for matching types. – crowleym Sep 10 '09 at 16:23
@philip-rieck hi, what does it means container.resolve in autofac?. If you dont use autofac, in which way you can declare Ilogger interface? thank you... – s_h Jun 1 '11 at 2:15
1  
@sebastian_h if you are not using autofac, this answer will have no meaning for you. You may want to look here instead: stackoverflow.com/questions/5646820/… – Philip Rieck Jun 1 '11 at 18:34
@philip-rieck thank you, I received an app using it and truly I have lots of doubts. best regards – s_h Jun 2 '11 at 2:53

An update for the sake of the new (2.x) version. All you need now is:

container.Resolve<IEnumerable<I>>();

There's no longer a need for RegisterCollection() or ImplicitCollectionSupportModule - this functionality comes out of the box.

share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.