I'm currently trying out a few different ways of implementing repositories in the project I'm working on, and currently have a single repository with generic methods on it something like this:
public interface IRepository
{
T GetSingle<T>(IQueryBase<T> query) where T : BaseEntity;
IQueryable<T> GetList<T>(IQueryBase<T> query) where T : BaseEntity;
T Get<T>(int id) where T : BaseEntity;
int Save<T>(T entity) where T : BaseEntity;
void DeleteSingle<T>(IQueryBase<T> query) where T : BaseEntity;
void DeleteList<T>(IQueryBase<T> query) where T : BaseEntity;
}
That way I can just inject a single repository into a class and use it to get whatever I need.
(by the way, I'm using Fluent NHibernate as my ORM, with a session-per-web-request pattern, and injecting my repository using Structuremap)
This seems to work for me - the methods I've defined on this repository do everything I need. But in all my web searching, I haven't found other people using this approach, which makes me think I'm missing something ... Is this going to cause me problems as I grow my application?
I read a lot of people talking about having a repository per root entity - but if I identify root entities with some interface and restrict the generic methods to only allow classes implementing that interface, then aren't I achieving the same thing?
thanks in advance for any offerings.