I am using Autofac as my IoC in my WCF service. I have a situation where I want to pass an object to a nested type (ie a type that is not resolved directly, but when resolving another type). As far as I understood, passing this object as a constructor parameter is the preferred way in Autofac. Here is an example of such a situation.
The nested type:
public class EventLogger<T> : IEventLogger<T>
{
public EventLogger(IRepository<T> repository, User currentUser) { ... }
}
The type I am actually trying to resolve:
public class SomeBusinessObject
{
public SomeBusinessObject(IEventLogger<SomeLogEventType> logger, ...) { ... }
}
The registration:
var builder = new ContainerBuilder();
builder.RegisterGeneric(typeof(Repository<>)).As(typeof(IRepository<>));
builder.RegisterGeneric(typeof(EventLogger<>)).As(typeof(IEventLogger<>));
builder.RegisterType<SomeBusinessObject>();
The resolving inside my WCF service operation:
var currentUser = GetUserFromServiceContext();
var bo = lifetimeScope.Resolve<SomeBusinessObject>();
How and where should I pass the current user to my logger? Should I assume that the WCF operation has to know that resolving SomeBusinessObject requires to resolve IEventLogger first and pass a resolved instance when resolving SomeBusinessObject? Something like this (pardon me if this does not work, it is just an idea):
var currentUser = GetUserFromServiceContext();
var logger = lifetimeScope.Resolve<IEventLogger<SomeLogEventType>>(new NamedParameter("currentUser", currentUser));
var bo = lifetimeScope.Resolve<SomeBusinessObject>(new NamedParameter("logger", logger));
If this is the solution, what happens if the type is nested deeper? Doesn't that defeat at least some of the purpose of dependency injection?