3

I have got the following interface definition:

public interface ICommandHandler
{
    ILogger Logger { get; set; }
    bool SendAsync { get; set; }
}

I have multiple implementations that implement ICommandHandler and need to be resolved. While Castle Windows automatically injects the Logger property, when an ILogger is injected, I can't find a way to configure the SendAsync property to be set to true by Windsor during the creation of new instances.

UPDATE

The command handlers implement a generic interface that inherits from the base interface:

public interface ICommandHandler<TCommand> : ICommandHandler
    where TCommand : Command
{
     void Handle(TCommand command);
}

Here is my configuration:

var container = new WindsorContainer();

container.Register(Component
     .For<ICommandHandler<CustomerMovedCommand>>()
     .ImplementedBy<CustomerMovedHandler>());
container.Register(Component
     .For<ICommandHandler<ProcessOrderCommand>>()
     .ImplementedBy<ProcessOrderHandler>());
container.Register(Component
     .For<ICommandHandler<CustomerLeftCommand>>()
     .ImplementedBy<CustomerLeftHandler>());

What ways are there to do this with Castle Windsor?

1 Answer 1

8
.DependsOn(Proprerty.ForKey("sendAsync").Eq(true))

or with anonymous type

.DependsOn(new{ sendAsync = true })

regarding updated question, it seeems what you need is along the following lines:

container.Register(AllTypes.FromThisAssembly()
   .BasedOn(typeof(ICommandHandler<>))
   .WithService.Base()
   .Configure(c => c.DependsOn(new{ sendAsync = true })
                    .Lifestyle.Transient));

That way you register and configure all handlers in one go, and as you add new ones you won't have to go back to add them to registration code.

I suggest reading through the documentation as there's much more to the convention-based registration API than this.

3
  • Thanks @Krzysztof. Must I apply this .DependsOn on every concrete command registration, or can I apply this once?
    – Steven
    Apr 20, 2011 at 12:05
  • That depends how you register them. It must make its way to every component but if you register them via convention you write that code once. Apr 20, 2011 at 12:07
  • I use 'normal' registration (see my update). Can you point me at example that shows me how to do this through convensions?
    – Steven
    Apr 20, 2011 at 12:15

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