First, sorry for the vague question title. I couldn't come up with a more precise one.
Given these types:
{ TCommand : ICommand }
«interface» «interface» /
+-----------+ +----------------------/----+
| ICommand | | ICommandHandler<TCommand> |
+-----------+ +---------------------------+
^ | Handle(command: TCommand) |
| +---------------------------+
| ^
| |
+------------+ +-------------------+
| FooCommand | | FooCommandHandler |
+------------+ +-------------------+
^
|
+-------------------+
| SpecialFooCommand |
+-------------------+
I would like to write a method Dispatch that accepts any command and sends it to an appropriate ICommandHandler<>. I thought that using a DI container (Autofac) might greatly simplify the mapping from a command's type to a command handler:
void Dispatch<TCommand>(TCommand command) where TCommand : ICommand
{
var handler = autofacContainer.Resolve<ICommandHandler<TCommand>>();
handler.Handle(command);
}
Let's say the DI container knows about all the types shown above. Now I'm calling:
Dispatch(new SpecialFooCommand(…));
In reality, this will result in Autofac throwing a ComponentNotRegisteredException, since there is no ICommandHandler<SpecialFooCommand> available.
Ideally however, I would still want a SpecialFooCommand to be handled by the closest-matching command handler available, ie. by a FooCommandHandler in the above example.
Can Autofac be customized towards that end, perhaps with a custom registration source?
P.S.: I understand that there might be the fundamental problem of co-/contravariance getting in the way (as in the following example), and that the only solution might be one that doesn't use generics at all... but I would want to stick to generic types, if possible.
ICommandHandler<FooCommand> fooHandler = new FooCommandHandler(…);
ICommandHandler<ICommand> handler = fooHandler;
// ^
// doesn't work, types are incompatible
inparameter modifier is necessary. It is possible to support contravariantResolve()using anIRegistrationSourceas you have guessed. I've put them together in the past but don't have the code with me, if I can hack one up I'll post it for you. – Nicholas Blumhardt Aug 11 '11 at 23:55SpecialFooCommandHandlerthat wraps on anICommandHandler<FooCommand>does nothing more than callingthis.wrapped.Handle(command)in itsHandlemethod. – Steven Aug 14 '11 at 12:56IHandler<IAuditableEvent>in addition toIHandler<AddressChangedEvent>can be useful (whereAddressChangedEventimplements the interface.) – Nicholas Blumhardt Aug 14 '11 at 22:21