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After reading "Dependency Injection in .NET" by Mark Seemann I stay away from the Service Locator which is an anti-pattern.

Upon reading the release notes on MVC 4 I see:

Improved Inversion of Control (IoC) via DependencyResolver: Web API now uses the service locator pattern implemented by MVC’s dependency resolver to obtain instances for many different facilities.

Thus I'm left curious and confused why Microsoft would use a service locator in 2012.

2 Answers 2

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That's an implementation detail that you shouldn't care about. The important thing is that now that the Web API uses the DependencyResolver to resolve dependencies for many different facilities, you will be able to use a real dependency injection whenever you want to plug into those facilities. So in your code you will be using a real dependency injection. If Microsoft didn't use the DependencyResolver then it would have been you that must have used it (as a service locator anti-pattern) in your code in order to resolve dependencies when you want to implement some custom functionality. This would have been bad for you. Now it's bad for Microsoft but you don't care about them.

Thus I'm left curious and confused why Microsoft would use a service locator in 2012.

Because designing a framework is not the same as designing an application using a framework. There are some different things to take into consideration when designing a reusable framework such as ASP.NET MVC rather than just what's written in the books. Some example is to design the framework in such a way that a person using this framework will be able to take advantage of the best practices written in the books in his code using this framework.

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    +1 Frameworks follow different rules than applications. You want to keep a framework container agnostic (in case an application that wants to use the framework already uses a different container) and you usually don't want to enforce the usage of DI on those applications (as they might not want to use DI at all). Feb 23, 2012 at 8:37
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    I don't buy the argument that just because it's a framework, a Service Locator is appropriate. Yes, frameworks are different than applications, but it's perfectly possible to write a framework without using a Service Locator. Just look at ASP.NET MVC 1 and 2, or even something as complex as WCF. The problem with DependencyResolver in ASP.NET MVC 3+ is that it's not just an internal implementation detail, but rather being published and touted as public 'DI support'. Feb 23, 2012 at 13:06
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    Here are some pointers: stackoverflow.com/questions/2045904/… Feb 23, 2012 at 13:25
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    There's no solution to the problem of bad developers. That doesn't invalidate my points in any way. Service Locator isn't a remedy for that problem either... Feb 23, 2012 at 14:08
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    @MarkSeemann, then it would have been nice to post this as answer. It looks that the OP is looking for more answers. Feb 24, 2012 at 6:52
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As Darin points out, ASP.NET MVC 4 is a Framework and is container agnostic. That's why it provides a service locator in the form of IDependencyResolver. This allows anyone to plug in their container of choice.

However, I wouldn't call this an anti pattern. This allows you to use the container of your choice, but it doesn't force you the application developer to use service location. If the framework forced the developer to use Service Location, then I would call it an anti-pattern. But the developer who builds an ASP.NET MVC application is free to use DI via constructor injection, property setup, or service location. It's their choice.

Look at all the ASP.NET MVC examples of dependency injection published by me or the ASP.NET MVC team. In pretty much all cases, they're using constructor injection. They're not using service location.

In fact, most of the ASP.NET MVC source code itself doesn't use service location to retrieve dependencies. There's a few key places where the MVC calls into the service locator for legacy APIs and such. But that's about it.

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    That seems reasonable, I'm still wondering why I received this response back from Marcin Dobosz (blogs.msdn.com/b/marcinon) in a email to me him saying about Mark's book / and service locator being an anti-pattern he said: "I have not read the book so I'm not familiar with the argument for why it's an anti pattern. Could you clarify why you think it's a bad design?" Mar 13, 2012 at 23:16
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    To Clarify, I emailed Marcin who I know works for Microsoft, and was surprised that he never heard that the service locator has been called an anti-pattern ( this is easy to find on the internet) I am not trying to throw him under the bus, but it is an example I think of what Mark S. is referring to. Mar 13, 2012 at 23:22
  • you said: "Look at all the ASP.NET MVC examples of dependency injection published by me or the ASP.NET MVC team." Can you provide links to some you suggest? I have some service references that many of my controllers use. They get an object, which is provided to a model object (constructor or method) to do some work to form a model (viewModel if you will) which is provided to a View. my main reason for wanting to do IoC is from my test project I want to be able to provide something else that implements the IService from the ServiceReference w/o actually calling the Service from my test project. Sep 24, 2012 at 21:44
  • I see why it's needed for the legacy support and for the simple cases where DI is overkill. I just wondered why they didn't use System.IServiceProvider instead of creating a new interface that then needs new wrappers to be written for each real DI container? Feb 28, 2013 at 23:50

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