16

I am attempting to use the following Generic Repository Interface for DI and constructor injection:

public interface IRepository<TEntity> : IDisposable where TEntity : class

The problem is in order to define an instance of the Interface, I must provide the class type like this:

private IRepository<Person> _personRepository;

The issue with this is if I'm using DI (and I'm using Unity for IoC framework), then I have to define multiple instances in my constructor to get all repository interfaces I need to work with like this:

public MyClass(IRepository<Person> personRepository,
               IRepository<Orders> ordersRepository,
               IRepository<Items> itemsRepository,
               IRepository<Locations> locationsRepository)
{
  _personRepository = personRepository;
  _OrdersRepository = ordersRepository; 
  _itemsRepository = itemsRepository;
  _locationsRepository = locationsRepository;
}

Questions:

  1. Is this OK?
  2. If not where am I lost on this concept?
  3. Even if this is proper, what's the point of Unity to register Interface to concrete type? I've already done it because the generic repository forced me on declaration.

Please help clear this up for me, and I appreciate all your help!

0

5 Answers 5

11

As noted by D Stanley, a dependency must be a concrete interface. Otherwise, where are you going to declare T? Your dependent class could be generic, but you still have to say "T is a Person" at some point.

That said, Unity handles registering generic types pretty nicely.

Let's say you implement IRepository<T> with a generic class Repository<T> that wraps a DbSet<T> (or whatever).

The following registration and resolves will then work (which includes injecting into any constructors):

container.RegisterType(typeof(IRepository<>), typeof(Repository<>));

// no specific registration needed for the specific type resolves
container.Resolve(<IRepository<Person>);
container.Resolve(<IRepository<Order>); 

If you needed a specific override of a type (says the Items repository is special for whatever reason so it has a fully implemented ItemRepository class), just register that specific implementation after the generic one:

container.RegisterType<IRepository<Item>, ItemRepository>();

Resolving IRespository<Item> will now get your specific implementation.

For the record, I think this can only be done in code, and not configuration files. Someone feel free to correct that assumption.

1
  • 1
    You can register the generic classes in Unity configuration files. I have done it. <register type="IRepository[[Item]]" mapTo="ItemRepository" /> is an example. Love me some Unity.
    – Issa Fram
    Mar 29, 2014 at 19:49
2

Is this OK?

Sure. There's personal preference on whether to use constructor injection like you have or property injection. Constructor injection is cleaner since you don't have to have lot of parameters to your constructor, but it's safer as well.

what's the point of Unity to register Interface to concrete type

One reason is so that you can unit test MyClass without having to use your actual repository that hits a database. You can "fake" out the repository to return hard-coded values to test against.

3
  • What I wish I could do is have IRepository<T> repository as the method parameter, but I know that will not work. Can you explain why it will not? It feels wrong passing all of those in, but maybe it's proper and I'm over-thinking.
    – atconway
    Jan 16, 2013 at 19:05
  • 1
    Because each repository is a different type, and MyClass (apparently) needs 4 different repositories. You have to provide the concrete classes separately. It's not wrong (or uncommon) to have several dependencies injected the way you do.
    – D Stanley
    Jan 16, 2013 at 19:09
  • But what with the situation when would I need an additional method?
    – krypru
    Feb 25, 2016 at 14:55
2

You could consider using an Aggregate Service that bundles several other services together, but you should also look carefully to see if your MyClass is trying to do too much; having a very large number of dependencies can be a indication of that.

1
  • 1
    The aggregate service in this special case is call a Unit of Work.
    – Steven
    Jan 17, 2013 at 11:56
2

This seems ok except one missing point; you need UnitOfWork pattern to enable transactions. Without UnitOfWork pattern applied, all repositories try to commit db operations on different contexts.

1
  • Nothing in his question points toward him requiring UoW. As someone else pointed out, maybe his class is doing too much, but he never stated anything about trying to commit modifications on all repository at once. Also, technically, different repositories don't necessarily use different context.
    – Tipx
    Oct 26, 2016 at 15:39
0

I needed to do this using configuration file. It's actually pretty easy but took me a while to figure it out.

In this example we have an interface IRepository<T> and it has 2 implementations:

  1. OneRepository
  2. TwoRepository

We then have a class named Worker which depends on IRepository<One> and IRepository<Two>. We ask unity to create an instance of Worker for us and figure out the dependencies from the config file.

Interface and Implementation

All of these are in the namespace ConsoleApplication1 in this example.

public class Worker
{
    private readonly IRepository<One> one;
    private readonly IRepository<Two> two;

    public Worker(IRepository<One> one, IRepository<Two> two)
    {
        this.one = one;
        this.two = two;
    }

    public string DoOne()
    {
        return this.one.Add(new One());
    }

    public string DoTwo()
    {
        return this.two.Add(new Two());
    }
}

public interface IRepository<T>
{
    string Add(T t);
}

public class OneRepository : IRepository<One>
{
    public string Add(One t)
    {
        return "One";
    }
}

public class TwoRepository : IRepository<Two>
{
    public string Add(Two t)
    {
        return "Two";
    }
}

public class One { }
public class Two { }

Unity Configuration

Please note we instruct unity and tell it the name of the assembly. Then we register the 2 implementations.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<configuration>
  <configSections>
    <section name="unity" type="Microsoft.Practices.Unity.Configuration.UnityConfigurationSection, Microsoft.Practices.Unity.Configuration" />
  </configSections>
  <unity xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/practices/2010/unity">
    <assembly name="ConsoleApplication1" />
    <container>
      <register type="ConsoleApplication1.IRepository[[ConsoleApplication1.One]]" mapTo="ConsoleApplication1.OneRepository" />
      <register type="ConsoleApplication1.IRepository[[ConsoleApplication1.Two]]" mapTo="ConsoleApplication1.TwoRepository" />
    </container>
  </unity>
</configuration>

Application

This is the Composition Root.

public class Program
{
    static void Main()
    {
        UnityContainer container = new UnityContainer();
        var res = container.LoadConfiguration();
        Worker worker = res.Resolve<Worker>();
        Console.WriteLine(worker.DoOne());
        Console.WriteLine(worker.DoTwo());
        Console.Read();
    }
}

The output as expected is:

One
Two

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