I am using entity framework with the unit of work design pattern, my class structure is as follows:
public interface IUnitOfWork
{
void Save();
}
public class MyContext : ObjectContext, IUnitOfWork
{
public void Save()
{
SaveChanges();
}
}
I then register the MyContext type mapping as:
IUnityContainer unityContainer = new UnityContainer()
.RegisterType<MyContext>(new ContainerControlledLifetimeManager());
I know if I did the following:
unityContainer.RegisterType<IUnitOfWork, MyContext>();
IUnitOfWork unitOfWork1 = unityContainer.Resolve<IUnitOfWork>();
IUnitOfWork unitOfWork2 = unityContainer.Resolve<IUnitOfWork>();
Then unitOfWork1
would be the same MyContext
instance as unitOfWork2
, as IUnitOfWork
maps to MyContext
, which is a container controlled instance.
However, if instead I do this:
unityContainer.RegisterType<IUnitOfWork, MyContext>("MyUnitOfWork");
IUnitOfWork unitOfWork1 = unityContainer.Resolve<IUnitOfWork>("MyUnitOfWork");
IUnitOfWork unitOfWork2 = unityContainer.Resolve<IUnitOfWork>("MyUnitOfWork");
Then unitOfWork1
and unitOfWork2
resolve to two different instances of MyContext
, which doesn't make any sense to me, as they both map to MyContext, which is still a container controlled instance. It appears that when the mappings are named, they don't resolve the second type parameter in the same way.
The reason I require named type mappings is because I have multiple different ObjectContext
s all of which implement IUnitOfWork
, so it would be wrong to define a global IUnitOfWork
type mapping.
My question is simply, how can I use named type mappings but still retain the functionality of the first implementation.
N.B. I am actually using a PerResolveLifetimeManager
in my real implementation, however ContainerControlledLifetimeManager
highlights the point in less code.
Edit
As per my conversation with Daniel Hilgarth.
I fixed my problem by changing the registration of the class with a dependency property of IUnitOfWork
.
Previously it was along the lines of:
unityContainer.RegisterType<Service>(new InjectionConstructor(new ResolvedParameter<IUnitOfWork>("MyUnitOfWork")));
However, instead of resolving a named IUnitOfWork
, I took a different approach and instead resolved the implementation directly:
unityContainer.RegisterType<Service>(new InjectionConstructor(new ResolvedParameter<MyContext>()));
Thank you Daniel and TheCodeKing for explaining the purpose of named registrations :)