1

So I have an abstract factory class, and the idea is that in the constructor of this factory, I will be passed from autofac an IEnumerable of all registered services I'm interested in. There is a method in this factory that passes a parameter, and the code will loop through the IEnumerable and return the matching service. Easy as pie, the abstract factory pattern.

The problem is, I've recently introduced a generic type in my interface the factory is returning, and I'm not sure how to write the constructor so autofac knows to still return all registered services, and ignore the generics essentially.

Some code:

My Interface:

public interface IRunnerServices<in T>
{
    void Create(T entity);
}

Some implementations of the interface

public class RunnerServiceA : IRunnerServices<A>
{
    public void Create(A entity);
}

public class RunnerServiceB : IRunnerServices<B>
{
    public void Create(B entity);
}

public class RunnerServiceC : IRunnerServices<C>
{
    public void Create(C entity);
}

// Many, many more...

And in my composition root, I register these services like this

builder.RegisterType<RunnerServicesA>().As<IRunnerServices<A>>();
builder.RegisterType<RunnerServicesB>().As<IRunnerServices<B>>();
builder.RegisterType<RunnerServicesC>().As<IRunnerServices<C>>();

And just so you know, A, B, C all inherit from the same base class

public class A : LetterBase
{ }

public class B : LetterBase
{ }

public class C : LetterBase
{ }

Now, my abstract factory

public class RunnerServicesFactory
{
    private readonly IEnumerable<IRunnerServices<????>> _candidates;
    public RunnerServicesFactory(IEnumerable<IRunnerServices<????>> candidates)
    {
        _candidates = candidates;
    }

    public IRunnerServices<????> Create(int discriminator)
    {
        return _candidates.First(c => c.Discriminator == discriminator);
    }
}

The question lies in what do I provide above in the constructor and other declarations at ???? to let autofac know it should pass in all registered services of this generic?

I've tried this, but no luck as autofac passes nothing

IEnumerable<IRunnerServices<LetterBase>>
1
  • What you want is to use covariance and contravariance at the same time which is not possible. Do you need contravariance ? Apr 21, 2016 at 18:18

1 Answer 1

0

In order to cast your RunnerServiceA implementation to IRunnerService<LetterBase> you need to make IRunnerService<T> covariant with the out generic keyword modifier which is not possible because you have one method that accept a T argument.

.net won't allow you to cast RunnerServiceA to IRunnerService<LetterBase> you can try by doing this simple code :

var runnerService = (IRunnerServices<LetterBase>)new RunnerServiceA();
// Throws an InvalidCastException 

One possible solution would be to make the IRunnerService<T> covariant like this :

public interface IRunnerServices<out T>
    where T : LetterBase
{
    void Create(LetterBase entity);
}

By doing this, you will be able to cast RunnerServiceA to IRunnerService<LetterBase> and doing this code :

IEnumerable<IRunnerServices<LetterBase>> runners = new IRunnerServices<LetterBase>[] {
                                                        new RunnerServiceA(),
                                                        new RunnerServiceB()
                                                    };

Then Autofac will be able to resolve IEnumerable<IRunnerServices<LetterBase>> if RunnerService is registered as IRunnerServices<LetterBase>

By the way what you are doing let me think about IIndex<TKey, T> :

public class RunnerServicesFactory
{
    private readonly IIndex<Char, IRunnerServices<LetterBase>> _candidates;
    public RunnerServicesFactory(IIndex<Char, IRunnerServices<LetterBase>> candidates)
    {
        _candidates = candidates;
    }

    public IRunnerServices<LetterBase> Create(Char discriminator)
    {
        return _candidates[discriminator];
    }
}

and the registration will be like this :

builder.RegisterType<RunnerServiceA>().Keyed<IRunnerServices<LetterBase>>('A');
builder.RegisterType<RunnerServiceB>().Keyed<IRunnerServices<LetterBase>>('B');
builder.RegisterType<RunnerServiceC>().Keyed<IRunnerServices<LetterBase>>('C');
2
  • I don't exactly understand your covarient solution, did you mistype something. you declare IRunnerServices<out T>, but nowhere is there an output type of T.
    – raterus
    Apr 22, 2016 at 13:01
  • @raterus the out modifier is present only to allow .net to cast RunnerServiceA to IRunnerService<LetterBase>. Apr 22, 2016 at 13:05

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