show/hide this revision's text 3 added 8 characters in body

I think I found the solution. Here you have my implementation of ServiceProvider You can find the description of it on my blog.

public class ServiceContainer : IDisposable
{
    readonly IList<IService> services = new List<IService>();

    public void Add<T>(T service)
    {
        Add<T,T>(service);
    }

    public void Add<Key, T>(T service) where T : Key
    {
         services.Add(new Service<Key>(this, service));
    }

    public void Dispose()
    {
        foreach(var service in services)
            service.Remove(this);
    }

    ~ServiceContainer()
    {
        Dispose();
    }

    public T Get<T>()
    {
        return Service<T>.Get(this);
    }
}

public interface IService
{
    void Remove(object parent);
}

public class Service<T> : IService
{
    static readonly Dictionary<object, T> services = new Dictionary<object, T>();

    public Service(object parent, T service)
    {
        services.Add(parent, service);
    }

    public void Remove(object parent)
    {
        services.Remove(parent);
    }

    public static T Get(object parent)
    {
        return services[parent];
    }
}

Yes it uses static field, but all references are removed in finalizer so the only drawback is that ServiceProvider stays one GC generation longer than usually.

EDIT: OK, after few tries I must admit that Jon Skeet was right, currently there is no simple solution to this problem. My solution written above can work only if I fulfill 2 constraints:

  1. I use Dictionary<WeakReference, T> services instead of Dictionary<object, T> services
  2. No service will have reference to ServiceProvider.

Otherwise you will have memory leaks :-(

Simple solution that Microsoft could provide is to create native WeakReference< T > which will solve constraint No 2. and we can write services like this:

Dictionary<WeakReference, WeakReference<T>> services
show/hide this revision's text 2 hopless

I think I found the solution. Here you have my implementation of ServiceProvider You can find the description of it on my blog.

public class ServiceContainer : IDisposable
{
    readonly IList<IService> services = new List<IService>();

    public void Add<T>(T service)
    {
        Add<T,T>(service);
    }

    public void Add<Key, T>(T service) where T : Key
    {
         services.Add(new Service<Key>(this, service));
    }

    public void Dispose()
    {
        foreach(var service in services)
            service.Remove(this);
    }

    ~ServiceContainer()
    {
        Dispose();
    }

    public T Get<T>()
    {
        return Service<T>.Get(this);
    }
}

public interface IService
{
    void Remove(object parent);
}

public class Service<T> : IService
{
    static readonly Dictionary<object, T> services = new Dictionary<object, T>();

    public Service(object parent, T service)
    {
        services.Add(parent, service);
    }

    public void Remove(object parent)
    {
        services.Remove(parent);
    }

    public static T Get(object parent)
    {
        return services[parent];
    }
}

Yes it uses static field, but all references are removed in finalizer so the only drawback is that ServiceProvider stays one GC generation longer than usually.

EDIT: OK, after few tries I must admit that Jon Skeet was right, currently there is no simple solution to this problem. My solution written above can work only if I fulfill 2 constraints:

  1. I use Dictionary<WeakReference, T> services instead of Dictionary<object, T> services
  2. No service will have reference to ServiceProvider.

Otherwise you will have memory leaks :-(

Simple solution that Microsoft could provide is to create native WeakReference which will solve constraint No 2. and we can write services like this:

Dictionary<WeakReference, WeakReference<T>> services
show/hide this revision's text 1

I think I found the solution. Here you have my implementation of ServiceProvider You can find the description of it on my blog.

public class ServiceContainer : IDisposable
{
    readonly IList<IService> services = new List<IService>();

    public void Add<T>(T service)
    {
        Add<T,T>(service);
    }

    public void Add<Key, T>(T service) where T : Key
    {
         services.Add(new Service<Key>(this, service));
    }

    public void Dispose()
    {
        foreach(var service in services)
            service.Remove(this);
    }

    ~ServiceContainer()
    {
        Dispose();
    }

    public T Get<T>()
    {
        return Service<T>.Get(this);
    }
}

public interface IService
{
    void Remove(object parent);
}

public class Service<T> : IService
{
    static readonly Dictionary<object, T> services = new Dictionary<object, T>();

    public Service(object parent, T service)
    {
        services.Add(parent, service);
    }

    public void Remove(object parent)
    {
        services.Remove(parent);
    }

    public static T Get(object parent)
    {
        return services[parent];
    }
}

Yes it uses static field, but all references are removed in finalizer so the only drawback is that ServiceProvider stays one GC generation longer than usually.